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Old 10-31-2006, 08:44 PM   #1
Chris Saper Chris Saper is offline
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Jonathan,

Your portrait is simply beautiful.The painting has life and spontaneity, and sensitivity.

Your article is a big deal and is well deserved. Congratulations!
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Old 10-31-2006, 09:12 PM   #2
Marina Dieul Marina Dieul is offline
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Beautiful (model and painting) and very expressive.
Do you paint on blue canvas?
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Old 10-31-2006, 09:29 PM   #3
Alexandra Tyng Alexandra Tyng is offline
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Jonathan,

I agree totally with everyone else. This is an amazing piece of work. Although it is true that your wife is beautiful, it is the life and expression that you brought out of her and put into your creation that really make this special. I love your colors, and your shadows are so nice and transparent.
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Old 11-01-2006, 05:05 AM   #4
Ilaria Rosselli Del Turco Ilaria Rosselli Del Turco is offline
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Jonathan, a really impressive accomplishment, especially under time and audience pressure! Could you please tell us what your palette was for this painting to allow you such speed ?
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Old 11-01-2006, 06:12 AM   #5
Allan Rahbek Allan Rahbek is offline
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Jonathan,
It's a lovely portrait, I am impressed that you could do such subtle work in a crowded place. Did you stand back for watching the values?
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Old 11-01-2006, 01:34 PM   #6
Jonathan Hardesty Jonathan Hardesty is offline
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Sharon Knettell - Thanks for your kind words! I know exactly what you mean about artists using high contrast. I had no choice in this one because there was so much bounced light everywhere. Without the light next to my wife's face I had absolutely no shadows at all so it was definitely challenging. Whenever I get into a situation like that I always remember what I read in Richard Schmid's book. He says something to the extent of, "If something isn't an actual light source itself...you can paint it". So I figured I could paint it...and if it didn't turn out I could shift the blame from my lack of skill to the lighting scheme. Thanks again for your encouraging words.

Chris Saper - Thanks! I definitely love working in a defined amount of time because the portraits definitely do have a certain spontaneity to them. In my training I would sit all day working on a cast with minimal deadlines so it's nice to have a little fire started under me every once in a while. Thanks for the comments about the article too. Something about being in the paper is definitely fun...although they made my wife's face look weird in that picture. She doesn't seem to mind though. Beautiful and certainly not vain...what more can a man ask.

Marina Dieul - Thanks! The blue is actually from an imprimatura (almost a wash layer) from another painting that I started on that canvas. If you scraped off my wife's face you would see the remnants of an old brass pot or something. I abandoned that still life, scraped it off and used the canvas for my wife's portrait. I don't have a specific tone of imprimatura that I use for all my paintings. I do a different color or value depending on the painting.

Alexandra Tyng - Thanks so much! I'm glad that you like the colors because I was actually struggling with those a lot on this painting. It was so hot in that place that my wife was getting flushed. All I felt like I could see on her skin was red and more red. Using artificial light didn't help any either. So the color was definitely a struggle so it means a lot to me that you found it successful. Thanks again!

Ilaria Rosselli Del Turco - Thanks! These are the colors I use in my palette. Ivory black, Ultramarine blue, Cobalt Blue Light, Viridian, Raw Umber, Asphaltum, Transp. Oxide Red, Terra Rosa, Alizarin Permanent, Cobalt Violet, Cadmium Red light, Yellow Ochre, cadmium yellow deep, cadmium yellow light, and titanium white. Although I don't think the palette has as much to do with the speed though. I think the speed has most to do with the drawing. If I can get the values and edges correct at the beginning then I am usually ok. I spend a long time on the drawing. For the first 2 hours this painting looked horrible. Everyone kind of passed over it and looked at the other finished work I had hanging up. It is only within the last 45 minutes that the painting started to "come alive". I spend a long time adjusting the drawing. I think the most important thing is knowing what color and value shape you should put down and knowing what kind of edge it should have. Color is secondary really. Bad color, I have found in my own paintings, is usually a product of improper values.

Allan Rahbek - Thanks! Yeah it definitely was crowded in there. Probably 500-1000 people passed in and out of the studio before the night was over. I definitely stepped back a lot. I have found that I need to be standing when i paint...I can paint sitting down but I don't prefer it. I like getting back and getting a general impression of what I'm doing. Often times I find it's the big things I am really messing up as opposed to the details. There were some periods of time I couldn't step back though because people were literally an inch from my back...one guy could have rested his chin on my shoulder hehe. Some people offered advice and things too. It was fun to meet all those different people and talk with them but it's definitely not the situation I would choose to paint in all the time.
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Old 11-01-2006, 05:33 PM   #7
Janel Maples Janel Maples is offline
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Three hours? Wow.

This week I hired a model to come to my house to FORCE myself to draw from life and after three hours she still didn't have eyes, a nose or a mouth.

And I was working in pencil.

This is beautiful and so is your wife.
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