Face Making

Artist Gwenn Seemel’s bilingual blog about all the faces she makes while painting faces.

Le blog de l’artiste peintre franco-américaine Gwenn Seemel. Les articles sont en anglais et en français, et souvent ils sont bilingues.

Good dog!

Monday 13 April 2009 - Comments / Commentaires (2)

Joey is still just a puppy, but he taught an old dog (me!) some new tricks.



a black dog chewing a bone

This is Joey in his natural state: chewing on something.  Though I foresaw some issues with including the bone in my painting, I felt it was too important to Joey’s personality to leave it out. 



process of painting a dog portrait

I knew the bag was going to be in blues, greens, and blacks, so I started out in that vein. 



process of painting a dog portrait

From the beginning, the bone looked a little strange. 



process of painting a dog portrait

It made Joey look like a saber-toothed Cocker Spaniel!



process of painting a dog portrait

But the chew-toy wasn’t the only—or, ultimately, the main—problem. 



process of painting a dog portrait

Joey’s deep velvety coloring makes him difficult enough to photograph…



process of painting a dog portrait

...and those difficulties translated directly to paint!



process of painting a dog portrait

I was forever losing the structure of Joey in the saturated darks.  Here, I tried to go in with some white lines to define him again…



process of painting a dog portrait

...and, here, I went in stronger still, trying to force structure on an image that had lost it entirely.



process of painting a dog portrait

It was around this time that I figured out that my usual blacks—fluid combinations of burnt umber and phthalo blue—weren’t going to cut it.  I rarely use tube black and I didn’t want to do so here, but the gloss finish of the phthalo blue was making it very difficult to integrate the whole painting. 



process of painting a dog portrait

The glare of the deep blacks (under Joey’s chin for example) may not be not that obvious in a still shot like this, but I knew that, as a functional item always seen from a variety of changing angles, a You Bag with an inconsistent finish wouldn’t cut it. 



process of painting a dog portrait

Unsure of what to do about that issue, I instead focused on the bone problem by painting it out.



process of painting a dog portrait

I hoped I could make Joey’s mouth look natural even without his plastic toy to give it that open shape.



process of painting a dog portrait

In the mean time, all my false starts had built up a lot of paint on the surface of the bag and made it stiffer than it should be for maximum stuff-ability.  I took some sandpaper to it…



process of painting a dog portrait

..and tried to make it work without the bone.



process of painting a dog portrait

Here, I finally stumbled onto a solution for the deep coloring by introducing a new pigment into the painting: ultramarine blue. 



process of painting a dog portrait

By mixing the ultramarine with the phthalo and the burnt umber, I came up with a rich black that didn’t produce a sheen. 



process of painting a dog portrait

Another restructuring of the face—a last ditch attempt at making it work without the bone.



process of painting a dog portrait

The home stretch.



Gwenn Seemel's portrait of a black Cocker Spaniel

Gwenn Seemel
Joey
2009
acrylic on canvas tote
15 x 19 x 5 inches
(detail below)



detail image of a painted portrait

In the end, I’m very pleased that I managed to capture Joey with his bone: he’s a very chewy pup so it wouldn’t be right to leave it out!  I’m pleased, too, that in the process, I learned to incorporate an unusual (for me) pigment in a new way.


RELATED ARTICLES:
- Mother
- A little pouch of love
- Expressive ears


CATEGORIES: - Process images - Practice - You Bag -


(2) Comments / Commentaires: Good dog!

Megan...

I totally love it. He’s so cute and the bag captures it! xx

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Judy Fischer Walton...

Fantastic Art.  I love your photos of the process.  And you surely captured Joey’s personality

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