Here is the second in my meditation triptych series. This one uses a detail view of the rocks that I was sitting on, made of serpentine. Beautiful rich red coloured rock shot through with creamy white veins and patches of green. It is lovely to look at and I have convinced myself that it colours the sand, I can see pinkish hues in the sand, I know I can!
This is the watercolour sketch for the larger painting. The sketches in the earlier post, "Training Session", are for this painting also. I find that by doing these I can calm my senses down and think about colours, tones, effects of light and what is happening in the picture. Also what I want to happen in the picture, after all, by the time a sketch makes it to become a finished painting, destined for the framers and then the gallery wall, you the artist, are most defiantly the boss. You can twist light, move mountains if necessary, smooth a cliff or ruffle up a forest. It is your world, you get to decide what you want to show, to hide or to underline. Ah ha! I have just worked out why I have spent my life being an artist. I am very bossy, didn't get to be God so became the next best thing, an artist.
6 comments:
I do like these triptychs Sarah. The serpentine is fabulous and I'm sure the sand does contain it.
The light before a storm is always unique and you've shown it well here.
I love serpentine! Whenever I'm on a beach where there is any I come back with pockets full of pebbles...
These triptychs are working really well. That seascape is stunner - as it should be given it's been produced by God's right hand woman! ;)
How are you framing them?
this works SO well - an absolutely beautiful light and the play of colours is gorgeous
The Lizard is probably an area I know least and I don't at all remember the serpentine rocks - fascinating
Sarah, please play god more often!
These are all lovely, Sarah...the transition from watercolor to oil is gorgeous...
the view from afar framed by a nearer examination is intriguing
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