November Along the Potomac, watercolor, 10"h x 14"w. |
The watercolor painting above started as another demo in my current class on watercolor landscapes. This photo was taken a number of years ago at the same spot as another landscape I posted here recently: "River Bend."
The photo from which "River Bend" was drawn was taken in late spring, when the foliage was green and lush and the waterline lower. The cloudy day suffused that scene with a soft glow of grayish-green light. I went back to the same spot in early November of the same year, after many of the leaves had come down. The afternoon was bright and clear, the golden glow of the sun low on the horizon, as it is in shorter days of fall and winter, and the color scheme completely different: shades of golds and blues.
The challenge in this painting was dealing with the expanse of water--the colors and shadows in the reflections, and the contrast with the land masses in the fore and back areas. As is my custom, I painted the sky first, to establish the lightest values, and gradually worked downwards from the backdrop of trees in the distance towards the shadowy foreground.
The water was painted all at one time, adding the colors of the reflections, moving them around, and lifting the lights with a brush before the paper dried. After the water was completely dry, I added the darkest details of the rocks and branches. I hope it conveys the lyrical mood of the scene.
1 comment:
You now write in the best vein of these earlier naturalists whose books you so much enjoy and learn from. As one pro to another, your use of the colon is masterful and confident. You are now officially nonparallel. ;-)
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