Sunday 24 March 2013

Painting Plein Air in the Paddock

Yesterday it snowed nearly all day but only really started to settle in the evening.  On waking this morning there was a light covering but as the sun came out it began to rapidly thaw.  As I glanced out the window and up our little paddock the sky looked quite dark and mauve and I loved the tracery of bare branches and snow lying amongst the clumps of grass.  I resolved to get out and paint!!!  This was the perfect opportunity to road test my equipment - if I realised I had forgotten anything I could easily nip in for it.

Pochade box, tripod and backpack

This is my equipment which I have organised to have ready in the studio to take out whenever the urge strikes.  As the box is fairly heavy I wouldn't want to carry it too far so I have bought a 2 wheel shopper trolley to use for occasions where I may be having to walk a bit further, or for around urban locations.  I'm sure you'll get to see it some time soon.

 

All ready to go...

It is great having everything to hand.  The 10 x 8" canvas board gets secured upright, the wooden palette surface I have decided not to use, I prefer to lay my paints out on a tear-off paper palette for the time being.  The brushes I select can slot into the drilled holes on the left.  The paints, palette knife, brushes are stored securely in the drawer.  The thermos cup dangling off the side is my water container.  I am working with water mixable oils and just used this to dilute paint in the early stages and to clean my brushes between colours.  If you look really close you can just see that the board actually had the beginnings of a previous old painting, I gessoed over this with a pale blue tint so I had an overall mid tone to work on.


Diluted underpainting to establish composition

 
I diluted the paint with water and used a small round to get the gist of the composition before changing to a filbert to start blocking in some of the main shapes.


Developing the painting

Still working with a bigger filbert brush start developing colours of the field, paint still diluted.


Finished painting

As I worked the snow 'pockets' were thawing fast.  The sky was also changing fast and becoming lighter, less interesting.  As the dark sky was what inspired me in the first place I decided to stick with my original concept.

The whole 'trip' was about two hours.  I had been standing close to a hedge which afforded some shelter from the chilly wind, but as I packed up I realised suddenly how cold my fingertips had become (I was painting with fingerless gloves on).  Once back indoors I cleaned my brushes before settling down with a bowl of hot tomato soup.  Whilst not a brilliant painting I am pleased with it as a record of my first official plein air outing.  Here's to many more...


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