Darkness Reveals the Radiance Within | |
Susan Convery "Vineyard Diamonds" | |
The Play of Light and Shadow | |
In the greater world, the forces of light and dark are dancing the same yin-yang ballet they have followed since life began. We need darkness in order to perceive light. Light reveals and shadow veils, connects, and obscures. Shadows provide depth, complexity, and dimension, they provoke introspection, courage, and silence.
Our souls find meaning in this interplay of joy and sorrow, hope and despair, vulnerability and resistance. Our inner world is populated with multitudes - inner goddesses, wounded children, rebellious teenagers, cunning demons, and fearless warriors... When we embrace our own shadow, the dark and wounded aspects of our psyche feel safe enough to enter into the light for healing. Light is a metaphor artists use to contemplate the radiance of the soul and shadow reminds us to embrace the totality of our human experience.
In the realm of art, luminous light serves to mirror our hope, joys, sorrows, and aspirations. Light symbolizes grace, beauty, and truth. It conveys the ephemeral nature of the soul.
Darkness and shadow provide contrast and evoke emotional recognition deep within. Using the alchemy of light and shadow an artist’s vision of reality becomes a prism through which it is possible to witness the world anew and experience the emotions, memories, and perceptions of our shared humanity
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Albert Bierstadt "Yosemite" |
Regardless of the subject matter, this interplay between light and darkness is our metaphor to convey the very essence of the soul. Many artists have become so absorbed in their quest to master the representation of light on canvas that they felt even one complete lifetime was not enough to master it. In fact, many of the great masters of the past have made light their central subject rather than just being guided by how light transforms things.
In the late 19th century an art movement arose out of the Hudson River School of Art called Luminism. Artists in this style aligned with the Transcendentalist writings of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau in their desire to immerse themselves in nature to know themselves and the divine.
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Jane Bloodgood Abrams "Winters Light" | |
William Trost Richards "Jersey Coast" | |
Most Luminist paintings emphasize tranquility and depict land or waterscapes with calm reflective water. Characteristic hazy skies depicting the effects of natural light on the landscape take up more than half of the composition. Luminists use glowing light to capture moments in time through the use of atmospheric perspective and concealed brushstrokes. April Gornik said, "I began to see that the luminists... attempted to recreate a landscape's experience for the viewer...Their paintings were not so much depictions as they were complex machines of special effects." A 1980 National Gallery exhibition of Luminist art influenced many contemporary artists to embrace and expand on these questions in new and interesting ways.
Some living artists who work with luminosity are Thomas Schaller, Mitch Albala, Skip Lawrence, Brian Keeler, Cathie Hillegas, and Jeanne Dobie. I borrowed some of their suggestions on how you too can capture more light in your paintings.
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Thomas Schaller "__"
Notice the dramatic range of values and how the details are located for maximum contrast
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Sunlight is powerful stuff. Your paintings will become more meaningful, and personal if you can throw off the elementary concepts of copying, describing, embellishing, and adding details to labeled objects in local color. What emotional response might you create if you painted only the essence of light and shadow, the conversation between brilliance and obscurity?
Sunlight has the power to make a black roof appear white and white objects appear black. When you see only the patterns and shapes created by light and shade you free yourself from the limits of objects and your compositions are distilled down to their basic essence where they can approach the more expressive realm of poetry. Simplify, condense, and eliminate details that detract from the mood and meaning of your subject and see what emerges.
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Mitch Albala "Rooftops"
Do you think these rooftops are white or black up close? Notice he left out all local color.
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Seeing the shape of the shade is not easy. In a past essay, I introduced you to the Japanese concept of Notan. Notan is an alternating pattern of black and white where white represents all areas in light and black represents the pattern of shade. If your subject reveals itself and has a strong abstract design at the most preliminary phase it is much more likely to be a strong painting when you add in many more values and colors.
If you have access to Photoshop it is easy to experiment with Notan using the editing feature “threshold” on a photograph. I am including a few links here to articles and videos if you are interested in experimenting with Photoshop.
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To create a Notan drawing use white for every area that is in the sunlight. Disregard all local colors and values. A black surface receiving sunlight is left white. A red, yellow, or blue surface in light is left white.
Be committed to this idea. Identify the source of the light (sun or lamp) and remember that anything perpendicular to it is in light. A clear blue sky without clouds should be interpreted as white paper. The flat planes of a lawn remain white. Look for and color in cast shadows. Any surface that has cast shadows on it is in the light (white).
Color in only that portion of the subject that is in shadow.
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Your drawing should contain an interesting, rhythmically connected pattern of both light and shade which distills your excitement and emotions for the subject. Walk away and gain perspective on your drawing to see if it carries your idea from a distance.
Manipulate the light to mold reality into a more subjective and personal statement. Are there shadow areas you can link together to create a stronger shape with a variety of segment lengths, changes in direction, and detail? Are there lights you can connect to define your subject more clearly? Save your detail for the edges of your light areas.
Use overlap to create depth, adding in features to improve your composition if needed
| Notice how this artist uses overlap and interlocked shapes that connect to the sides of the page. The greatest detail has the strongest contrast. |
Trace or copy your shade shape onto good paper or canvas. Fill this shape with paint just slightly darker than the white of the page in single light value. Use warm colors in your first layer and focus this warmth and saturation in the middle area of the painting. Do not overwork or overcomplicate the detail in the shadows.
Let the shapes merge and melt together into a unifying haze. Defined details should appear only where the edges of your shadow shape meet the light. With just one layer your subject will appear to be bathed in a hazy, strong light or thick atmosphere such as fog.
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Skip Lawrence "Florida Orange"
Notice how the artist has limited the use of cool colors to the area of greatest contrast. How has he connected the darks?
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Add cool colors in your second darker layer to contrast with your first layer and create more glowing light in the shadow areas of your scene. This can make the glowing light stand out and give you the ambiance you want.
As the contrast of values moves further apart the light expressed will appear stronger. Brilliant light can only be seen in contrast to a strong dark. Experiment with this. Try tinting the paper or canvas before adding a darker value shade shape. Use 4 or 5 values. Notice how these variations affect the luminosity of your subject.
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Thomas Schaller "Toulouse"
Can you see how he started with one light layer and then added darker and darker layers? Do you feel the bright sunlight? Would this effect be there without the dark sky?
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Here's a step-by-step I created to demonstrate this process: | |
This is a drawing of the shadow shapes | |
Here is a Notan of the beach shack based on the drawing on the left | |
I filled in just the shadow shape with a single mid-tone value using mostly warm colors. | |
This version has a full range of values, but I've been able to keep the painting loose and the colors related and harmonious. Notice how the purple sets off the yellow of the house. | |
The luminosity of color comes from choosing colors by their effect on each other. Paint colors change their apparent brightness, transparency, and hue depending on the context in which they appear.
To create a GLOW effect you will want to contrast both value and temperature of your primary color. A warm, pale pink will glow when surrounded by dark, cool green. Purchased blacks, grays, or neutrals will not have the same effect as the complement of your selected color. If your light value is a pale yellow, your darks should have a purple or purple-gray tone.
You can further exaggerate the GLOW that is forming by generating a warm/cool relationship between your light and dark by remixing your complementary dark, altering the proportions of pigments to move the color to be warmer or cooler. Every color on the color wheel has a cooler and warmer color on either side of it. Purple has blue and red as its neighbors. If your light-valued yellow is warm, the best complementary dark to enhance it would be a cool bluish purple. For a cool light-value yellow, set it off with a warm reddish purple.
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Notice the change in luminosity when the colors are surrounded by complements in different values. The glow appears stronger when the values are close together. | |
Jane Bloodgood Abrams "Days End"
Which colors has the artist used? How has she linked her values into larger shapes?
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In a luminous painting, strong darks can overpower your composition. Notice how most of the example paintings use very little dark. In this situation, mid-value color contrast is more effective. Instead of a rich dark, strive for a mid-value mix. Keeping your values close will maintain unity and flow within your larger shapes.
Mix the complement of your light color and shift it into a warm or cool variation as needed to create the temperature contrast. Try muting the mid-value mix by adding a bit of its complement to gray the mixture. A cool bluish purple can be grayed slightly with a touch of warm yellow. This should cause your warm yellow light to GLOW even brighter.
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Jeanne Dobie "Colors of an Island Evening"
Notice how this artist has limited her use of darks and white to create a glow. Which color combination did she use?
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Remembering that paint colors change in apparent brightness, transparency, or hue depending on the colors that are nearby will give you more success in establishing luminosity. Strong bright pigments cannot produce luminosity by themselves.
A luminous glow has soft edges and subtle transitions. Start with pale, pure color to maintain the impression of light. Gradually blending a complementary mix in an opposite temperature will interact to create the GLOW you desire.
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Brian Keeler "Luminous Light"
What happens to the trees as the light moves behind them? How is the artist using color to exaggerate the luminosity of the sky?
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As you observe the world around you and the way other artists render the light, pay attention to how light affects the objects closest to it. Gradually, you can add your observations to your compositions. See if you can observe how a backlit subject has a bright rim of light around it that obscures the details inside its outline, or how the sun washes out the width and darkness of trees in a halo as it sinks behind them. Notice how light is absorbed or reflected by the texture of different objects, how detail and value diminish in bright sunlight. | |
Thomas Schaller "_"
In order to see the rim lighting in this image the artist has made the sky very dark. We need this contrast to perceive the brilliance of the light.
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Are you ready now to dedicate your entire life to mastering the depiction of light and shadow? Probably not. But light is a worthy subject matter all on its own and there is so much more to learn. As artists we distill the objects in our scene into a poetic interplay of light and dark, expanding our ability to interpret the world in our own personal vision.
This is the paradox of light. We need light to appreciate the blue of the skies, the green of the grass, and even the colored leaves of fall… Without light there is no sight, without shadow there is no contrast, no depth.
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Cathy Hillegas "Luminous"
Notice the contrast between the dark background and the light shape of the flower. Would there be drama with a mid-tone blue gray background? Can you see the warm and cool temperature contrasts inside the flower?
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P.S. If you didn't get the chance to download your free gift from me: Here is my "Inner Artist Inspiration Package" - a series of illustrated quotes in watercolor based on flower photos taken by family and friends.
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Creed for Carrying Light
As the morning sunrise brings the light,
Allow me to absorb the sun’s rays,
Warming my heart
Binding to my bones
The energy electric in my fingers.
As the earth wakes and begins to hum,
The creatures of the land and sea
Stir or settle, sing or sleep,
And I am with them, rising
Deciding how to exist today.
Today I will shine like a sun.
Today I will gleam like gold.
May my eyes be lit with joy,
May my countenance be calm with peace,
May my voice soar with truth.
May all the lights we carry within
Become steadfast points of existence
As guideposts and lanterns, showing the way,
Disarming the darkness
With ease and readiness.
Today I will shine like a sun.
Today I will gleam like gold.
May my heart beat with grace,
May my mind sustain hope,
May my soul sing the sacred song.
- I wish I knew the source of this poem
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My Dad's 90th Birthday
I spent the month of May at Martha's Vineyard for a very special occasion. My dad turned 90 and we threw a big party to celebrate. Family & friends united from all corners of the country. The party was perfect. The speeches were moving and my dad has been walking on air ever since.
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This is coming up in June | |
Florida Watercolor Society | |
Treasurer
It's official! I've been voted onto the Board of the Florida Watercolor Society! I'm the new treasurer and I'll be starting in June.
I will also be one of the demo artists at the FWS convention in September talking about Depth of Space.
On Sunday, June 25th I will be explaining my painting process to FWS members at a Zoom Confab from 2:00 - 3:00 pm.
I am very excited about this new opportunity to meet and work with dedicated watercolor artists!!
https://floridawatercolorsociety.org
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RADIANCE SURYA YANTRA
Workshop in my Home Studio
Saturday, June 24 2:00-5:00 pm
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Yantras are the visual embodiment of an audible, vibratory mantra. They are geometric symbols imbued with a color and shape frequency that contains the energy pattern of a deity or planet. Yantras are used in meditation as a centering device and when finished to breathe the desired energy into the space of your home or office.
We will color a Sun/Surya Yantra as shown above.
This sacred class will begin with an invocation of the power and strength of the Sun. With the sun yantra by your side difficulties at work, serious health issues, and mental stress won't pose a threat to you. You will feel motivated to lead a more effective and intelligent life.
Benefits of the Sun/Surya Yantra are:
- increased radiance
- dispels gloom
- courage and valor
- invincible power of mind and self-belief.
- wealth, power, and a strong personality to govern others.
- removes obstacles to health, misery, poverty, and accidents
light snacks, tea, and water will be provided.
Investment: $60
Includes all supplies
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Susan's Interview on MVTV | |
Painting Joy
Created especially for artistic women in the third stage of life who are dissatisfied with their artwork and want to have more fun connecting with themselves and others. In this three-day watercolor workshop, we experiment with visual cues that inspire joy, discover personal symbols that resonate, and provide ways to bring more effervescence into our life and art.
Please recommend any venues you know that might be interested in hosting this workshop in 2023 or 2024.
I would very much appreciate your help in getting the next booking.
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Private Art Retreats
A personalized experience, full of art and discovery, for those who….
- are traveling alone, or with a couple of friends
- would like a much more flexible, and free experience, and lots of fun, too, tailored exactly to your needs, interests, and experience level
- may want to combine painting with organized discovery trips and tours and really get to know the ‘real’ South Florida
- would like to book in for a shorter or longer time than most workshops
- don’t want to have to bring a mountain of supplies in their luggage
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Private Lessons and Events | |
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Master Classes for High School Students |
Private, highly personalized classes in mastery for artistically-minded US & international students virtually on Zoom or in person at my home.
If you have a student who is a visual thinker, willing to push the boundaries of their own work, and serious about improving their options for college, I want to hear from you! Schedule a time to discuss how I can collaborate with you to build a portfolio that will give your student the greatest chance for success.
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Art Workshops, Critiques & Presentations |
Invite me to present or lead a workshop for your school, club, or guild.
I can customize a program for your event or present my skills programs on composition, color theory, drawing faces, coordinating light/shadow or understanding the cues for depth. I am available for judging, confidence-building critiques and recorded tutorials.
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Improve Your Artist Statement |
If you would like to delve more deeply into your own inner questions and clarify your thoughts as you create an artist statement for your website, a gallery show, a sponsor, or another project, please reach out, and let’s talk. I have helped many students write compelling statements for AP Art, college applications, and competitions.
Find out More:
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Sketchbook Prompt:
Find an image of a subject bathed in direct light with strong cast shadows. Draw the outline of the shade as one shape, connecting wherever possible and ignoring all details such as windows doors, signs, people etc. Block in the shade shape with a single light value of cool colors. Leave all the sunlit surfaces as white paper. Does your image “read”? Experiment by repainting this scene 3 or 4 times using different value contrasts. Try tinting the paper before adding a darker value shade shape. Try 4 values going from white to black. Try using 4 values of warm color.
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Please contact me if you are interested in adding any of the paintings below to your collection.
I will deliver if you live within a 2-hour drive and if you live further away, I will give you a reasonable price for shipping.
Venmo, CashApp, PayPal and Zelle are welcomed.
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Title: Peace River
Media: Watercolor and Gouache on Arches
Size: 22" x 15" Unframed
Price: $350.00
This painting is from memory of a place where the kids and I used to go paddling and camping. I was very interested in trying to capture the light coming through the trees at the end of the day. (notice the depth cues :-)
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Title: It's a New Dawn, It's a New Day
Media: Acrylic on Canvas
Size: 16"x 20" framed
Price:$450
Frame: Gold frame
This painting is an experiment using texturing and stencils to try to capture the emotional impact of a sunrise.
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Title: Bluebird
Media: Mixed Media Monoprint
Size: 11" x 14" unframed, 16" x 20" framed
Price:$350
Frame: Gold frame with 2" mat
A beautiful bluebird flies through an imaginary garden of printed blue begonia leaves
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Title: The Way Out is In
Media: Watercolor
Size: 15" x 22"
Price: $450
Frame: Gold with white mat
This painting shows the schist (stone) used to make the houses in the Portuguese mountains. The glass door is reflecting the landscape. To create this painting I used a new technique involving masking and blending a single triad of colors using a mouth atomizer.
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