Long Pose, Day 1 - "Danae"
I'm attempting to do a very fast (fast for me!) painting of the our model Danae this week, so today I blocked in this line drawing on mylar paper and then during a model break I transferred the drawing to my 16x20 hand-primed panel. I spent the last part of the day refining the pencil drawing directly on the panel. Then I erased the extra graphite, brushed down the surface with a wide, flat brush to get rid of eraser crumbs, and coated it with thinned Damar varnish (thinned with about 1/5th mineral spirits) to preserve the drawing and seal the porous surface.
Tomorrow I start painting - record speed for me!
ALSO:
$10 - Click here to sign up
I'll be giving a video tour of my studio, a behind-the-scenes look at my latest Wax Paper painting "The Wave", and also doing a drawing demo. You can even submit your own questions, in advance or in real time.
Hope to see you there!
Reader Comments (4)
Sadie, I'm so happy to see you doing more and more figurative pieces! This is sure to be a beauty. I only wish I lived much closer so I could join you.
I RSVP'd I'd be there but weekends get busy. I hope it's ok to send pay at last minute when I'm sure coast is clear lol Thanks for describing your process. The drawing is very clean so I thought you traced a photon on there. And would that necessarily be a bad thing? Hope I can join the fun (I'll try very hard!)
Hi Sadie,
Do you always seal panels with Damar varnish so that they are not too porous, or do you only do this if you need to preserve a drawing underneath?
Nathalie I always do a drawing, but I would also seal the surface if there was not a drawing, because the chalk-primed gesso makes a fairly "thirsty" surface. Some people use an oil primed panel because of this, I think it is less thirsty, but I do not do that.
Erika thanks, hope you were able to join the webcast! If not, you can still download the recording. I don't work from photos, much less trace them. Painting for me is about the process, not the end result, so shortcuts are not very tempting. Plus a drawing that is simply a traced photo always looks a bit mechanical.