I recently painted this little view of Morro Rock as a gift for a friend.
I recently painted this little view of Morro Rock as a gift for a friend.
This week I had the great privilege of studying with Matt Smith, acclaimed landscape painter and inspiring teacher. He packed the workshop with lecture, demonstration, and individual instruction. I want to record some of what I learned here.
Painting from Reference
The workshop focused on the process of painting from photographs and plein air sketches. Matt approaches the photo reference with the understanding that the photo always lies at some point and often many. Ask, what’s wrong about this–value, color, perspective? Use your experience and memory gained in the field to correct your reference. Painting well from reference requires lots of practice painting from life. He encouraged us to crop our reference images, rearrange elements, and to consider different formats. Do not depend too much on your reference; use it as a starting point for your painting.
Matt’s reference photo. Notice how he simplifies and rearranges elements.
Painting Demo
Drawing Stage:
The drawing stage is finished and he’s moving on to blocking in value and color. Notice how the darks are connected and how he’s created a line that guides the eye back to his focal point.
Block-In:
Almost finished with the block-in. Notice how he saves the sky mass until the others are established.
Fine Tuning:
Notice how darks are still connected and masses are simple. You can see the difference between the form shadow and cast shadow on the distant mountain.
See how he adds the snow and the cloud–first in shadow (above) and then in the light (below).
Note the more intense blue in the water, the details of the tree trunks, and the slight adjustment of rocks in the foreground.
It was such a gift to study with Matt Smith and to be among such a generous and talented group of painters. I’m looking forward to assimilating what I’ve learned into my own painting process. It’s wonderful to have some direction and inspiration for the painting ahead!
UPDATE: Here’s the finished painting Matt posted later…
Sometimes we vacation on the Oregon coast. I love the lonely beach stretching off
into the distance. This studio painting was created using reference photos and the
solitary sense of stillness I have in that wide open space.
I love painting in Laguna Beach. The canyons and hills are just as inspiring as the coast. This afternoon I was attracted to how rich the colors in the shadow were and how the last light illuminated just the crest of the hill and the distant mountain.
A photo of the same view clearly shows how a representational painting does more than just copy a scene. The artist translates the physical world through his or her own vision and communicates something (hopefully) truer, more focused, and more personal than a copyist.