Abuelo and Alexander
This past August I finally finished a very personal family portrait of my father and son which turned out to be a true labor of love, begun 3 years ago. My patient father simply waited until I was able to work on it, a little at a time, in between my portrait commissions.
My father is a passionate gardener and the background of this painting is my father's very own garden depicting his collection of azaleas, deciduous azaleas and rhododendrons. It is a fitting tribute to him and to the loving relationship he shares with my son. My favorite part being the tender gesture of their hands touching each other.
Workshop Wednesday: Teresa Oaxaca, the Figure in Charcoal
This past weekend I ushered in the New Year with a bang by attending Teresa Oaxaca's "Figure in Charcoal" workshop at the Art League in Alexandria, VA on Jan 2 - Jan 3rd. Considering that just the day before the workshop I was a little sleep deprived--and ok, maybe still "recovering" from the festivities, I was really happy and perhaps a little surprised when everything "clicked" for me during the workshop. But perhaps I shouldn't have been, Teresa Oaxaca has a lot to share with her fellow artists so listen up.
Full disclosure: I have been a big Teresa Oaxaca fan from the very first moment I met her in Rob Liberace's classes at the Art League. In fact, I own two of her self portrait drawings and one of her etchings (hint: when she says something is unsold over social media, that is your cue that you can purchase it). Teresa is one of my favorite contemporary artists and in my opinion the most promising. I just love the boldness of her charcoal drawings, the mixture of the gestural abstraction and rendered form. They are exquisite. And the fact that Teresa herself is super sweet and down to earth--I just knew I could learn a lot from her and I definitely did.
The following are my notes from the workshop and I hope you gain as much enlightenment from them as I did.
-Teresa's block-in is a big envelope, very loose, light & gestural.
-Sometimes the looseness (gesture) from the beginning is kept through the piece {I would add that it is this initial gesture that gives so much life & contrast of textures in her drawings}.
-She begins with a jumbo soft charcoal piece and initially adds a center line, eye line & forehead line followed by the shadow shapes of the eyes and nose. The rendering of the mouth and chin come second.
-Prefers Canson Mi Tientes paper (smooth side) and vine charcoal.
-Teresa uses a lot of straight hatching lines. "Easier to get structure in and keep it that way."
-Usually works life sized and steps back from the easel often to check her drawing.
-If you want to use crazy, energetic hatch lines like Sargent did in his charcoals (and Teresa does) you must have a solid geometric structure underneath {This subtle but powerful advice was one of the things that really resonated for me}.
-"Geometric shapes render & anchor the drawing."
-Her subjects start off looking more exaggerated in the beginning and then get more accurate as she continues working.
-She spends most of her time developing the light & shadow areas and then will knit them together.
-The nature of charcoal is that it is just dust. Get used to the fact that you will be constantly readdressing your darks throughout the process of creating a drawing.
-Uses a brush to soften along the core shadow on a cheekbone or will just drag the charcoal across.
-Shadows are solid, mid tones are a combination of blending or hatching (veiling).
-"I like to put the directional changes in the shadow shapes."
-She will often put a little speck of white chalk highlight in order to key her values {again, advice worth the price of admission right here}.
-"If your drawing is failing it is because you are not obeying the light/dark patterns."
-Ask yourself on the simplest of Master drawings, "What makes this really work?". Dissect and understand it.
-Most of the drawing will be carried by the in-between places that are either smudged or hatched.
-Make sure the shadow pattern is correct, even on a smaller form like the eye. The big shapes still need to be rendered on the smaller forms. Same rules apply!
-If you know you don't have time, stick to developing structure.
-She often veils in highlights on the planes of the forehead.
-Sargent spent all of his time on the structure and would throw his characteristic slap-dash bravura mark at the very last minute.
-If you don't plan on rendering an area leave it as a block-in or else you will be forced to fully resolve it.
-Gesture is the foundation of a minimalist drawing.
-Take pictures every half hour, it will reveal your own process to you. It also works as a mirror to show you your mistakes.
I want to personally thank Teresa for a wonderful workshop experience. Prior to this workshop, I never felt completely in control with Charcoal but I definitely feel more in control now and intend on practicing with it more often.
You can follow Teresa Oaxaca and her blog at her website www.teresaoaxaca.com, on Facebook at www.facebook.com/teresaoaxacafineart, on twitter and Instagram at @teresaoaxaca.
What's On My Easel
This sweet little girl is part of a double portrait commission I am currently working on. You can't really tell from this picture, but I am using a lot more paint here and aiming for more expressive brush strokes all around. And another new approach for me is the palette I am using, it is basically the Zorn palette with three additional colors (Cad red, Cad yellow light, Yellow ocher, Black, White, Prussian blue and a color similar to Magenta).