Showing posts with label Artists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Artists. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 3, 2012

A Look at Greatest Oil Painting Artists in recent history

Oil paints are a great prop of art which has produced some of the greatest artists across. If one is prepared to buy oil paintings, it will incline essential to know at head the biggest artists of them all and their works because a way to prize between a great painting and cheap paintings.

Leonardo Da Vinci Leonardo tops a list of all present favorite oil painting artists. Born in Florence just being one lawless Child, Leonardo reached limelight with Baptism of Christ through which he had painted an simulacre. However, Leonardo Da Vinci is remembered for his Last Supper instead of to scorn Fall guy superior in oil paints. Not many works of Leonardo exist today on account of his own disastrous experiments. The fifteen oil paintings on the artist that survive today are par excellence for his or her drawing and precision.

Michelangelo When it comes to oil painting artist names, Michelangelo cannot go unnoticed. An italian man, painter, who is famous for making Renaissance paintings, have also been a sculptor, poet, architect and engineer. Michelangelo has not been raised by his or her own parent and his own father was highly disappointed as he was told of his son ' s to become painter. The 16th Century painter is famous for sculpturing Pieta and David. It is really an irony that the work he could be most famous for were constructed with medium he hasn ' t been really fond of. He once thought that he is not good at fresco and not liked it. But even now, he is remembered for The Last Judgment and Genesis scenes.

Vincent van Gogh It ' s impossible to defeat Van Gogh in creating the very best of post - Impressionist artwork oil paintings. The level of hues he used as well as the emotions blurted out of his paintings, no other painter has been in a position to have the same impact again. He accustomed to work at Hogue gallery. It ' s possible to see his love for Downtrodden though the majority of his works. Unfortunately, he shot himself at the age of 37 and it ' s believed that he was mentally sick.

Pablo Picasso Picasso is yet another famous name in modern art paintings of his time. he would have been a sculptor and draftsman too in addition to being a painter and it ' s known for bringing cubist movement in art. His greatest artworks are inspired by German bombing during civil war. He has experimented in various mediums, techniques and theories the ones would die to purchase oil paintings by him. He was one of the most renowned 20th Century painters.

Rembrandt Rembrandt was Dutch by origin and was depending Michelangelo ' s works. Known for eroticism of his elements and subjects, unusual lights and painting figures from bible, Rembrandt focused upon dark background to generate his image 3 dimensional. He was supposed to be one of the best oil painting artists when it came to making portraits.

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Are Great Painting Artists Born or Are They Made

Okay hence, possibly like you, I ' ve scrutinize about creative geniuses and creativity. There ' s a humungous nonconformity between IQ and creativity, although it is possible to have high legion in both. It appears that our true best painters in human history have scored high in both categories, which brings me to bounteous matter; do you believe that great artists and painters are made, or are they just born that way? Indeed, possibly we should gibber about this for a moment.

You see, recently, I noted an advertisement for Aaron Brothers, an art and craft supply retailing chain. Over the three - day weekend they were having huge sales. One item really struck my fancy, it was a " Grow With Me Easel and Table, " with workbench for kids. Normally selling for $199. 00 for the set, quite nice actually, but then in this ad it was for sale 50 % off in the Aaron Brothers " Kid ' s Art District " area of their store.

In other words, if you wanted your child to grow up to be a great painting artist you might buy them an easel to start painting and drawing when they ' re very young. Isn ' t that what Tiger Woods dad did? He bought him a set of golf clubs. It turns out that Burt Rutan the famous aircraft designer started out building model airplanes in his youth, graduating to real airplanes that people could fly around in and now aircraft that leave the atmosphere.

If great painting artists are born, then buying paint brushes, paint, and easel for a young child probably won ' t make any difference. But if that child through nurture watches their parent painting on a larger easel, while they practice on a smaller one the chances are pretty good that they will become a darn good painter by the time they grow up into their teens. Even if they don ' t become the best in the world, or a painting great whose household name we are to memorize in school. A children ' s easel, that would be a pretty good start.

Of course, perhaps it is nature and nurture. And if a parent is a good painter, there is a good chance that child picked up some of those creative genes. If they exercise them, then they could also become a great painter, and if they don ' t, chances are they won ' t. Nevertheless, if you have a young child and you are a good painter, then you want to find out for yourself? It seems like a good idea to me, and it will certainly help their dexterity skills and the formation and formatting of their young creative brain. Please consider all this and think on it.

Sunday, September 9, 2012

Tips For Artists, How To Prepare Your Own Panels For Painting

Personally, I exalt painting on a solid surface forasmuch as I am addressing how to prepare a panel for painting.

I will discept hardboard, MDF, particle board, plywood and cardboard, and I am by oneself discussing rigid panels right double time, we can weigh canvas, papers etc some other clock.

Smallest I will toss around the materials, then their preparation:

For smaller work I raise " Masonite " [ironically the Masonite company no longer makes " masonite " hardboard] which is a high density hardboard and is made by tension exploding wood into unqualified fine fibers then re - compressing those fibers subservient plain high pressure and heat then that the natural lignin re - bonds the fibers. the holy mess is that the lignin is acidic and is the material that causes cheap paper like newsprint to turn lily-livered peregrination. There are legion grades of these hardboard products, pooh-pooh the cheaper ones, currently the larger grade in 3mm [1 / 8 inch] width, canvas back, is 11 dollars a 4 salutation 8 sheet at Home Depot. The 3mm is ok for smaller stuff, the 4 or 5 mm is improved for stake sizes but whereas this day in that you get over 16 touch 20 this material starts getting charming enormous.

The Apersan panels are " masonite ' type hardboard with frames made from birch plywood, these are true good panels!

The prototype hardboard panel is pre - coated with Melamie on both sides and is used in the furniture industry, but it is tough to find.

MDF is brace density fiberboard and is widely available, cheap, and exact flat, it is made also by potency exploding wood into fibers but the inequality between MDF and masonite is that it is not inflexible seeing much and pliable resins are numerous because a binder then it is put subservient heat and pressure. It is widely used in furniture and cabinets. It is not whereas capable because " masonite " and so you are need a thicker panel to start with and therefrom the extent termination will be wider, the other problems are low moisture resistance and the edges are feeble contused. Maya Lin uses MDF in her room sized contoured sculptures, it is in truth a selfsame attractive material in its self.

Particle Board, this is often distracted with MDF, it is sawdust [not separated fibers] at fault with resins and is actual chewed grazed and has mere skimpy moisture resistance, probity it is weighty, but it is cheap. I see no ground to use this for lifelong work and not numberless reasons to use it at all. It is used in the lowest grade of cabinets.

Cardboard, There are multifarious grades of paperboard, for painting you should find an tart free board, forget anything like poster board which is re - cycled newspaper or other cheap board because it will become brittle very quickly. There used to be materials called Millboard and Upson Board, these were recycled newsprint bases with a top layer of a better grade of paper with a glue sizing. I doubt if these are still made but if they are I don ' t recommend them. Corrugated cardboard is light but the flutes will telescope through as you paint unless you are attracted to it ' s funky qualities, it is not a good painting support.

If you are using a cardboard, you must gesso both sides, otherwise it will warp badly. Painting on un - prepared board is certainly possible, but be aware that oil paints will degrade paper in a few years and make it brittle, also the paper will soak up the oil and make the paints dull. If you use acrylic paints you avoid the oil to paper degradation issues but be aware that the absorbancy of paper will sometimes dull acrylics. For studies I sometimes use Canvaset paper which is paper with a canvas texture and a glue or gelatin sizing. This is ok but the sizing is a bit to slick in my opinion. If your looking for a cheap support and no prep work then this is probably the cheapest option.

If you are going to properly prepare cardboard it is just as much work as better materials with little difference in the costs of the actual materials, so why bother?

Plywood: My preference second to " masonite " for small work and my first preference for larger work is plywood. Plywood is made of thin veneers of wood, coated with glue, laid perpendicular to each other and pressed together under very high heat and pressure. Various grades have differing levels of strength, stiffness, moisture resistance and warp resistance. I have painted on Luan, Birch and Fir and prefer Luan. For smaller panels 6mm [1 / 4 " ] is ok, for larger panels that need a structural frame, I use 3mm [1 / 8 " ]. You can make a high quality, light weight, stiff and flat panel in quite large sizes with a bit of work. Top grade fir plywood is very expensive now days, the ordinary stuff would not make a good support since it easily warps, has voids, the texture will telescope when primed, etc etc.

For smaller work, up to 12 x 16 inches or so, that is going to get a decorative frame, you can use 6mm [1 / 4 " ] luan without a structural frame, over that size you are going to need a structural frame so you may as well use the thinner and lighter 3mm.

Luan plywood varies widely in quality, I find that the luan panels carried by big box lumber retailers, like Home Depot, are lower quality than what the independents carry. Look around for a wood panel dealer that sells to cabinet makers, they will have better quality materials for about the same or lower price. I recently bought some top quality 3mm luan panels for $8. 40 a 4 x 8 sheet.

For making frames for larger panels, I use poplar or top quality pine. Again finding a independent wood dealer that has better quality materials will pay off here. Poplar is available in the big box stores like Home Depot, it is clear and straight and just a bit more than their terrible " select " grade [which 30 years ago would of been used for furring strips]. Which ever wood you use hand select each piece for straightness.

Rip the lumber into 3 / 4 x 3 / 4 or 1 inch wide strips, do your best to cut out defects.

To frame a panel, start with a smooth flat table top. Lay your cut to size luan face down [best way to cut luan is with a utility knife and a new blade] Then use wood glue and clamps to glue a perimeter frame onto the edge of the luan. I do two sides at a time, using a 36 x 80 inch flush door as a table top, the luan and frame gets clamped to the door so to keep it flat, once the glue sets up, rotate the panel and do the other two sides. Once all 4 sides are set up you can add bracing across the panel. The larger the panel the more bracing needed. I use smaller strips to save weight, 1 / 2 x 3 / 4 or so work, these get glued to be back of the panel between the frames. [photos to follow].

I had a panel that I unwisely used lower grade pine to frame and it warped badly. To salvage it, I glued a second 3mm sheet of luan on the back side creating a hollow core panel, just like a hollow core door. BTW, hollow core doors make a good painting support, but are relatively heavy.

Let the glue set up over night with the panel laying down flat. Then sand any rough edges and you are ready for the next steps.

Panel Priming: Priming has to do several things, it has to isolate acids that may exist in the support materials, protect against moisture, stabilize the support, and to provide a receptive painting surface.

When preparing " masonite, plywood, mdf, or cardboard, I find that a sealer coat of shellac is ideal, Shellac does not raise the grain or cause warping and it does not react with gessos. Shellac is available in paint stores as clear [traditionally called white], orange [clear amber] and as a white pigmented primer or BIN. [Note that BIN sells primers with similar labels, make sure you get " shellac based " ]. I use white pigmented BIN, some painters like painting directly on clear shellac on luan.

For unsupported panels, first sand the panel using an electric vibrating sander and 80 to 100 grit sandpaper. You want to " break the glaze ". Then coat both sides and all edges of the panel with shellac. A disposable brush works or a small roller is even better. A single thin even coat is all that is needed. Let dry. Coating only one side may cause the panel to warp, if not right away then later at the worst possible time.

After the shellac is dry, go back with your vibrating sander and give it a good sanding, knocking down raised grain, splinters, rough edges, etc. 100 grit open coat sand paper is perfect for this. If you don ' t already have a sander I can recommend the 1 / 4 sheet sanders, I have had a Porter Cable for 8 or 10 years and I use it constantly.

After sanding, you are ready to apply the gesso. I use acrylic gesso, others prefer oil ground, or other traditional grounds. Discussion of grounds is involved and will be the subject of another artical.

You can brush or roll the gesso on. I use 1 inch diameter foam rollers which leave a nice even light texture. Between uses I don ' t wash them but keep them in a zip lock bag. I now just scoop gesso with a spoon from the gallon pail onto the horizontal panel or canvas then roll or brush it out. Doing this eliminates the waste you have with a roller pan and saves some clean up.

The first coat should be thinned out so to flow into any textures. Following coats can be to your taste. Different brands vary widely in handling characteristics. I find that the more expensive brands thinned down work better than the cheaper brands which start out thinner. At least 2 coats are needed, I put on 3 or 4 until the coverage is uniform. If you prefer a non - white ground, you can add some acrylic color to the gesso. I paint in oil and prefer to apply a thin oil color wash over the acrylic gesso when I start painting. I think the oil is more receptive to the subsequent layers of oil paint.

After the gesso is bone dry, sand it again. You should experiment here. It is possible to get too smooth and slick of a surface that will give your paint a smeary effect, too rough of a surface can interfer with details, for instance, but this is a matter of your taste and intent. I find that the foam rollers leave a nice pebbly surface that is just right after a quick sanding with 120 grit.

I highly recommend that every artist own a copy of Ralph Mayer ' s " The Artist ' s Handbook of Materials and Techniques ". First written in 1940 and revised many times since, it has a breath and depth not matched by any other reference. Every artist should read it cover to cover, not only to learn about their own media but to understand what artists working in other media do, also what is possible and what may be detrimental to your intent. It also helps you to understand how and why historic works were done they way they were. THis book should be part of any artists education in my opinion. I often see these in used book shops and garage sales [sometimes unread] and I always grab them and pass them on to worthy recipents.