Thursday, March 29, 2012

Great Color mixing tutorial

In Oil class Rachel did a fantastic job , her first abstract using some of the color field theory ideas, Staprans was a major influence on her here.

Monday, March 12, 2012

Oil Painting Class Materials and latest paintings in oils



I wanted to update and simplify my materials list, these items can be purchased at local art supply stores or you can go to the banner ad I have placed here and look for these items at very reasonable prices online at Blick.

Here are two still lifes I did recently ("Life as a Bowl of Cherries " SOLD immediately), and "Taking Time For Tea and Croissant" are hanging to date at Biscotti's restaurant in Avondale Jacksonville.

Colors
Burnt umber, burnt sienna, naples yellow, cadmium yellow, alizarin crimson, cadmium red, cadmium orange, cobalt blue, cerulean blue, large tube zinc white
Set of white nylons brushes -Flats #12,#4, #2, and Filbert#4,#2, a Whale tale steel palette knife, Gamblin refined linseed oil, Gamblin Gamsol pure odorless mineral spirits, some 8X8" Ray mar Boards to paint on or some (small of your choice canvases or canvas boards will do,
Paper palette tablet for mixing, a color wheel,
A small oil tub and brush cleaning bottle with a coil in it for thinner, paper towels or rags.

The Tulip Bubble of 2012



We are up to our snozzes at JCA in tulips to learn the soft watercolor blending techniques that flowers require to achieve delicacy and "luminosity", that's the key word here. We don't want to over work a watercolor- "Less is more"! seen up close is student Arlene Shapiro as she is progressing at a lightening pace as we practice these tulips. I am very encouraged. She gets the blending needed to create the undulating curves. Here is a close up of her tulips, of which we are both proud.
COMING EVENTS:
WATERCOLORS: We are looking forward to May 12 at Reddi Arts from 10-5pm Saturday where students I have worked with before can qualify to get this accelerated skills work shop to fast track their talent to the next level. Call John Cummings (904) 398-3161 ext 303 or John@reddiarts.com .
OILS: Upon request JCA has added a second watercolor class on Wednesday nights, 7-9pm.

Sunday, February 5, 2012

An Inspirational Abstract Source for Years to Come


In class I had a long small canvas I wanted to play on. I just wanted to play in color. I like to try different kinds of techniques and approaches to painting, and oil is one of the most versatile mediums for experimentation. You can get thin washes, then thick rich impastos, careful blends and then rich sumptuous glazes. This piece has all of those things. It was a class exercise that I enjoyed immensely. My starting point was a photo I took of a boat that had many layers of paint stripped partially off. It was an inspirational source that will continue to inspire a variety of interpretations for years to come

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Class Schedule for March -April!


Luminous Watercolors !
Watercolors Classes designed to help you achieve fresh
exciting paintings you will be proud to show!
Gordon Meggison has designed several "immediate reward" exercises that affirm key painting techniques to assure your approach is strong and successful. He encourages "play" as an essential part of learning often set aside for the "serious work" of adulthood. This "Fountain of Youth" ingredient helps you discover the pleasure, sense of poetry and accomplishment that is watercolor. Gordon will help you become "fluid" and loose, one of the features that watercolors is specially designed to meet. Join me and lets have fun!

Gordon's watercolor class schedules are currently as follows:
Reddi Arts: Fridays 10 am -1pm Starting Mar 2- ending April 6
Cost $195.
http://www.reddiarts.com/ClassesandWorkshops.html
www.reddiarts.com or call Jim (904)398-3161 ext 319

JCA: Mondays 10 am - 12pm Starting Mar 5-ending April 9
or: Wednesdays 7pm - 9pm Starting Mar 7-ending April 11
Cost: JCA members: $102. , $153 for non members
www.jcajax.org, or call Thelma Neid at (904)730-2100 ext 227 thelma.nied@jcajax.org

The Cultural Center at Ponte Vedra Beach : Please Request- Upon sufficient request by students, five members is the minimum requirement. www.ccpvb.org or email lrodante@ccpvb.org


Also- Refreshingly Simple Oil Painting!
Oil Painting can be easy or difficult. If you want to avoid tired overworked
oil paintings, Gordon Meggison has simple techniques that get you there fast!
We all want to paint like a pro, but first the basics need to get established or you find yourself making the same mistakes over and over and working yourself to death with little satisfaction. His approach to oil painting covers your introduction from the drawing, sketch wash, and leads you quickly to a pleasing finish in just a few calculated steps. Gordon will help you spot solutions so you can get on with doing what you really want to do, make great paintings!

Classes for Oils at JCA : (www.jcajax.org)
Mondays 7pm - 9pm Starting Mar 5 - ending April 9
Wednesdays 10 am - 12 pm Starting Mar 7-ending April 11
Cost: JCA members $102., $153 for non members
or call Thelma Neid at (904)730-2100 ext 227 or email - thelma.nied@jcajax.org
For materials lists go to host site or www.gordonmeggison.blogspot.com

Tuesday, January 17, 2012

Painting Atmospheric Effects in Oils



Sometimes a painting is not about a particular thing , rather it is about the space around the apparent subject. In this case the subject is not the farmhouse, but about the Tuscan landscape. Here in a couple of hours I rendered a small painting of the Tuscan atmosphere as the hills recede into the distance. Flattening out the treatment of the distant hills makes any detail in the foreground look more close and intimate, but there really is very little detail in this picture. Using warm yellow ochre and some orange and reds muted back in almost everything, even the greens, "warms" the tonal range of the picture to capture that warm summer in the Italian countryside as a day is setting. I could take this basic picture now and warm it and soften it further by adding glazes, but it needs to dry a bit before that can happen. That would be done with oily glaze mixes using burnt sienna. An artist that I love is George Inness if you want to study more atmospheric qualities of light in the way he handled his
landscape subject.

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

Winter Watercolor and Oil Schedule




I am teaching at a couple of locations, Reddi-Arts(reddiarts.com) and JCA (Jewish Community Alliance www.jcajax.org)

These classes are for beginner to intermediate watercolor enthusiasts. Basic color theory, color harmony, composition, wash techniques basic painting skills will be taught

Reddi Arts Watercolor Classes Jan 13,2012 Every Friday 10 am- 1 pm, a 6 week course

JCA Watercolor Classes Jan 9, 2012 Every Monday classes 10 am -12pm, a 6 week course


This class is for beginner to intermediate Oil painting enthusiasts. Basic color theory, color harmony, composition, wash techniques basic painting skills will be taught


JCA Oil Painting Classes Jan 9, 2012 a 6 week course starting at 7pm - 9pm a 6 week course

Saturday, November 5, 2011

At class we were covering some simple background wash techniques, then adding a tree, which I rendered over the background , so here are the photos for the students to review of the two parts of the painting. I am following with a better older sample of the same idea.

Thursday, July 14, 2011

Build up Varnish and Pigment




Here is the latest driftwood addition to the family of new techniques I am exploring. I am moving this out of the studio today like a newborn child ushered off to adoption before I can fall in love with it :( I really love this piece, but it is for ie-designs, so its sold already. In this one I discovered a new technique where I put varnish down thickly and loosely then drop in loose wet paint directly into the varnish to let it ooze naturally together. Then I add other successive colors next to those and let them chaotically run together (controlled chaos) to simulate natural grain and weathering. The varnish becomes a carrier and allows the pigment to fall naturally to different levels, allowing light to pick up color and texture on many levels. Its hard to describe in words or to photograph.

Sunday, July 3, 2011

Imbedded color technique


I am working on a large set of acrylic paintings, a driftwood series for an interior designer Veronique at wwww.IE-Designs.com (from a reference photo I took from a Jekyll Island trip I took). In this particular set I was given a limited earth tone palette, and all color variations had to spring from it, making it somewhat monochromatic. Here are some pictures of the stages of the piece. First I charcoal on the drawing. I could have stopped there , I loved the way the drawing looked! Second I started laying in a ground base of the colors that I premixed and selected, and put into squeeze bottles. Laying these colors down was particularly challenging and confusing. The idea is to put joint compound over this after the color dries thoroughly, skimming on the tree areas, and texturing the other areas. This will be the second base on which Stage 3 will be to sand down and remove the joint compound glaze gently to expose the underground color I laid in in Stage 2. As this color is exposed gradually it takes on a life of its own. I will then in Stage 4 lay in glazes onto the new "white" joint compound to bring back in the appropriate shadows and highlights. (See the pic examples)







Friday, July 1, 2011

Using Masking Fluid For Flexibility

I wanted to introduce the class to masking fluid, to show the class how the use of it can allow the artist to free up the background for wet rich wash techniques without worrying about losing your "whites" ie: the light colors areas. I also added a liberal use of salt to add detail; to the background. Laying in the background can be intimidating, when you worry about losing the wet edge or destroying whites. Here is my new second version of the carp scene using the masking fluid, in varying stages. Stage one you put the masking fluid on the whole carp and ripple bubbles. Stage 2 The masking fluid is rubbed off. Stage 3 more masking fluid is applied within the fish for highlights or "whites" then the fish is toned freely with washes. Stage 4 Is final toning and details.
Lastly to make the fish look underwater, I lightly glaze over the fish with a thin wash of cobalt blue and viridian to "push" the fish down under the waterline leaving a bit of the original color in a few choice areas to make the fish appear to be bobbing up to the surface to eat or the fins rising as they do during their movements




Todays Wednesday Custom Art Lessons

 Here are some students engaged each on their own paintings, I help each one at their unique level. Each of my students are amazing creative...