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Working Fisherman- Gill's Rock
Submitted by Aaron Holland on Fri, 2007-08-10 23:55.

Below is a demonstration on a Plein Air technique that I use for painting in one session:

Step 1: The Drawing
Begin by drawing an outline of the major elements in the scene. I used a thinned mixture of Ivory Black and Permanent Alizarin. Begin to make notes of any and all shadows; in this picture the sun was high so there were only a few prominent shadow shapes.

Step 2: The Wash
With thinned, and somewhat transparent, paint I cover the canvas. I want the painting to look like the finished picture as soon as possible! I work in simple, flat masses of color. Often-times I will work with the flat side of a china brush in a scubbing motion (against the bristles) to apply paint. When the canvas is covered I begin to paint opaquely.

Step 3: Thick Paint.
I now begin to add opaque paint ( once the canvas is covered), and at the same time I continue to develop more specific shapes and colors.

Step 4: Finish
Develop details, refine shapes, build up thicker paint in the lights. More blended color in the background, more broken color in the forground.
"Gill"s Rock" oil on linen 8 x 10" HOLLAND
