Sunday, 30 August 2015

My Favourite London Art Galleries

Whenever I am in London these are some of my favourite art galleries. I have included the website addresses so you can look them up and perhaps plan your visit:


National Gallery - www.nationalgallery.org.uk

National Portrait Gallery - www.npg.org.uk

Tate Modern - www.tate.org.uk

Tate Britain - www.tate.org.uk

Barbican Centre - www.barbican.org.uk

Leighton House Museum - www.rbkc.gov.uk

Coulthauld Gallery - www.courtauld.ac.uk

Royal Academy - www.royalacademy.org.uk

Hayward Gallery - www.haywardgallery.org.uk

Serpentine Gallery - www.serpentinegalleries.org

But, the best gallery of all is online at BBC Your Paintings -  www.bbc.co.uk/arts/paintings/artists

So if you are going to London take a look at one or two of these and fill your heart with art!

Best wishes

Lee




Sunday, 16 August 2015

Portraiture Part Two - Create Beautiful Skin Tones




Original Oil Painting by Lee Papworth

This week I thought it would be a good idea to give some tips on mixing successful skin tones  I hope you find it useful!


Whether your skin appears predominantly pinkish or brownish, it will be made up of a great many different hues and tints.  Skin tends to appear as a collection of cool and warm colours, which can help describe the form.  Cool colours tend to recede.  Warm colours tend to advance forwards.  Your palette should therefore comprise of a selection of cool and warm colours.


Skin Colour Mixes - Try using different combinations and different amounts of the following primary colours to create light skin tones:- Yellow Ochre, Naples Yellow, Cadmium Yellow (warm), Cadmium Red (warm), Alizarin Crimson (cool), French Ultramarine (warm), Cobalt Blue (cool) and Titanium White. 


Use blues for veins as well as darker, cooler areas and shadows.  Adding blue will make your skin colour more natural looking.  Use Raw or Burnt Sienna and Burnt Umber to make darker skin tones.  Also consider a combination of primary colours to make beautiful rich brown colours for darker skin tones as well.


As always keep your mixtures clean and pure by limiting the number of colours in them to three or four.  Take your time when mixing your colours.


Tip 1: Make a skin tone chart of your own by experimenting with the colours above.  Each time you mix a colour write down next to it the colours you mixed to make it.  The best way to learn is trying out different combinations and not being afraid to make mistakes!


Tip 2: Never be tempted to buy a 'flesh tint' tube of paint.. as this will never look natural and you will become a better painter mixing your own colours.

 

Most importantly....have fun! 

 

Follow my blog so you don't miss out on Portraiture Part Three.  If you would like to attend my art classes on the Isle of Wight please use the contact form at the bottom of this blog. 



Best wishes

Lee

Original Oil Painting by Lee Papworth


Original Oil Painting by Lee Papworth

Friday, 7 August 2015

Upcoming Private Courses - Summer/Autumn

Skyscapes (from land and sea to sky)


This is a 4 week *open medium course commencing Friday 4th September 2015 from 12.30 to 3pm at Ryde Rowing Club.  Course fee £65 and please bring your own materials.  


Painting Interior Scenes  (including figures in the home)


This is a 4 week open medium course commencing mid/late September on Thursdays from 10.00 to 12.30 at Bembridge Village Hall.  Course fee £65 and please bring your own materials.

Farming Landscapes/Scenes (lost British Impressionism)


This is a 5 week open medium course commencing Friday 25th September 2015 from 10.00 to 12.00 at Northwood WI Hall.  Course fee £70 and please bring your own materials.

*Open medium:- oil paints, acrylics or watercolours.

To book or for more information please use the contact form at the bottom of this blog and I will contact you asap.

Best wishes

Lee

Upcoming Council Courses


The courses below are run by the council and delivered by myself.  To book a place call the Community Learning Centre on 817280.  (The council courses are available which are on their website and advertised locally).


Abstract Painting to Music
4 WEEKS
CLC
Sept
Mon
1-4pm
28-Sep
Learn to Draw using Pastels & Oil Pastels WORKSHOP
CLC
Nov
Sat
10-3pm
07-Nov
Print your own Tote Bag WORKSHOP
CLC
Nov
Wed
10-3pm
18-Nov
Drawing Colour Pencil Portraits WORKSHOP
CLC
Oct
Wed
10-3pm
21-Oct
Drawing with Charcoal & Graphite Sticks WORKSHOP
CLC
Nov
Mon
10-3pm
30-Nov
Abstract Canvas Painting
CLC
Sept
Sat
10-12pm
19-Sep
Palette Knife Painting
CLC
Sept
Sat
1-3pm
19-Sep
Painted Christmas Cards
CLC
Nov
Sun
1-3pm
29-Nov

Best wishes

Lee

Sunday, 26 July 2015

Portrait Tips - Part One

Knitting - oil painting by Mrs I Westcott

Here are a few pointers to help you map out the facial features of your sitter. The following are guidelines only as the characteristics of individual sitter's may vary:

  • The bottom of the eye socket is at the mid point of the face.
  • The top of the ears are on a line with the eyebrows.
  • The bottom of the ears are on a line with the end of the nose.
  • There is one eye's width between the eyes.
  • The distance between the pupils is a bit wider than the width of the lips.
  • The skull is as deep as the length of the face.
  • The back of the skull is slightly wider than the face.
  • Capturing the person's hairstyle is integral to creating a successful likeness.
Part two to follow soon!

Best wishes

Lee  


Sunday, 19 July 2015

Creating a Successful Landscape or Seascape

Luccombe to Culver - an original painting by Lee Papworth 2015

Here are a few ideas to assist you in creating successful landscapes and seascapes:


Choose the correct size and shape support (Canvas, board, paper etc.) for your intended painting

Armatures, plan and organise the direction and flow of the composition
(5 best ones – S, L, Diagonal, Triangle and Radiating Lines)

Think in terms of abstract shapes (masses) forget detail at the start

Be dynamic with your composition, crop for drama

Create an entrance

Choose a point of view (low, high or normal)

Have a focal poiint

Think foreground, middle ground and background when choosing
a composition

Don’t be afraid to modify/edit a composition to make it visually stronger

Remember in the western world we read text left to right (this also applies to reading art) have something of interest on the left hand side

Try to lead the eye into and around a landscape painting, try to avoid too many horizontals or objects in the centre blocking your progress into the painting also avoid awkward edges

Have a strong sense of perspective (both aerial and linear) make sure your painting gives the illusion of depth, make it recede

Detail and definition get less towards the background (choose cool colours in the background to achieve this)

Choose an interesting subject (use a view finder/L shapes - ‘en plein air’)

Do prep work – pencil sketches, colour sketches in paint

Commence painting fully prepared 

Paint the details last

And most importantly - Enjoy!!

Best wishes

Lee

Walking to Shanklin - an original painting by Lee Papworth 2015

Sunday, 28 June 2015

Atmospheric Painting Course June 2015


On Friday an exciting course sadly came to an end 'Atmospheric Painting.' During the four weeks the students created some stunning work with spectacular results.  Their stunning work is shown below...


Painting by Andrew 2015


Painting by Liz 2015


Painting by Deepak 2015


Painting by Barbara 2015


Painting by Gill 2015


Painting by Rosemary 2015


Painting by Kate 2015


Painting by Peter 2015


Painting by Laraine 2015

Thank you to all the students who took part in this enjoyable class and for those who gave kind permission for their work to be shown on the blog, not forgetting Sandra whose work was not photographed on the last day.  If you would like to take part in one of my classes or would like private lessons please contact me via the contact form at the bottom of this blog page. 

Best wishes

Lee

Saturday, 13 June 2015

Oil Painting Techniques Glossary

The following is a glossary of terms for techniques used in oil painting. These are just a few of the techniques you can use.  I will be going into more detail in future blog posts and try to show you an example or two of the techniques:


Dry Brush
This technique can be used in oils or watercolour, very scant use of pigment on a textured surface the paint clings to the raised part of the surface only. Therefore it is a useful method of suggesting texture, for instance, weathered rock or long grass, but like all special techniques it should never be overdone.

Glazing
A glaze is a thin-layer of transparent paint laid over a dry layer which can be either thick or thin.  Since the lower layer is visible through the glaze, the effect is quite different to anything that can be achieved with opaque paint.

Fat Over Lean
An expression applied to oil painting, which indicates that pigments mixed with oil (fat) should be used on top of those thinned with turpentine or other spirit (lean). Build up several layers, the oil content should progressively increase. If lean paint has been applied over oily paint the top layer will dry before the lower one has finished shrinking and this can cause the hardened lean paint to crack or even flake off.

Impasto
This term describes paint that has been applied thickly enough to retain the marks and ridges left by the brush or painting knife.  The ability to build up oil paint is for many people one of its main attractions.  The picture surface can acquire a three-dimensional quality which can be used to model form an even mimic the texture of the subject, such as clouds.

Scumbling
An uneven working of a thin layer of paint over another of a different colour, so that the under layer shows through. It gives a veiled or broken effect.

Sgraffito (to scratch)
This technique involves scoring into the paint after it has been applied; using any rigid instrument such as a paint brush handle, a knife, fork or even a comb, the surface layer of wet paint is scratched into to reveal either the ground colour or a layer of dry colour beneath.

Texturing
A number of techniques can be used to provide specific textures, among them ‘imprinting’ and ‘knife painting’.  One way of texturing is to mix the paint with one of the special impasto mediums, other favourites additives are clean sand, sawdust, wood shavings, plaster and decorator’s filler.

Tonking
Tonking is a technique that can be used to remove too much applied paint on the surface of a painting, use a sheet of absorbent paper such as newspaper or kitchen towel, place over the overloaded area or the whole painting, gently rub with the palm of the hand and then carefully peel off.  This carries off the top layer of paint leaving a thinned down version of the original with softer outlines.

Wet into Wet/Wet on Dry
Wet into wet involves applying colours over and into one another while still wet, each new brushstroke mixes to some extent with those below or adjacent to it, the result are softer, with forms and colours merging into one another without hard boundaries. Wet into wet is the essence of the ‘Alla Prima’ approach; the entire painting is done in one session.  If you are completing a painting over a series of sessions you will probably find that you are painting wet on dry.

Best wishes

Lee



Sunday, 31 May 2015

My Favourite Artists

 

Artists and designers that have inspired my love of art are listed below. They have changed the way I see the world.  Each of these has inspired how I draw, design and paint. 


If you have a favourite artist take a moment to think about what you like in their work.  Is it the composition?  Subject? Colour? Just taking time to think about this may help you cultivate a style of your own.



Leonardo da Vinci
Michelangelo Merisi (da Caravaggio)
Joseph M. W.Turner
Gustave Courbet
William Holman Hunt
Claude Monet       
Vincent Van Gogh
Pablo Picasso
Wassily Kandinsky
Kasimir Malevich
Franz Marc
Giacomo Balla
Hannah Hoch
Salvador Dali
Edward McKnight Kauffer
Tom Purvis
 Dame Barbara Hepworth
Henry Moore
Edward Hopper
Jackson Pollock
Mark Rothko
Frank Stella

Best wishes

Lee





Sunday, 24 May 2015

Stylising and Abstracting Seascapes May 2015


Friday was the final class in an exciting course where students took seascape images and created stylised, semi and abstracted seascapes. 

 

Here are some of the paintings completed - a big thank you to the artists whose work is shown here and many thanks to Liz who also attended, but unfortunately missed the photo session.  


Best wishes


Lee 

Painting by Liz

Painting by Linda

Painting by Jean 

Painting by Jan

Painting by Lolly

Sunday, 17 May 2015

Expressive Seascapes May 2015

Painting by Carol

The wonderful paintings you see here are the results of a four week expressive seascape and landscape course.  


Some are more expressive than others, however each artist in their own way stretched themselves further than they had before in this genre.


Painting by Carol

Painting by Cathy

Painting by Judi

Painting by Simonne

Painting by Tony

Detail of Painting by Derek

Painting by Maureen

Painting by Dawn

Painting by Meryel

Many thanks to all the artists whose work is shown here.  

Also thanks to Pam and Maria whose paintings are not shown here.  


If you are interested in joining my future classes I will be running two courses in June:


  • 4 week Atmospheric Painting at Northwood WI Hall commencing Friday 5th June 2015

  • 1 day Painting and Drawing Workshop at Bembridge Village Hall on Thursday 25th June 2015


If you would like to book onto these courses please give me a call on 01983 409785.


Best wishes


Lee