Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label painting. Show all posts

Saturday, August 09, 2014

Transparent and Opaque

Kindly click on the image for a bigger view

Title: Transparent and Opaque

Medium: Watercolor with opaque white [gouache/poster color]
Surface: Fabriano 160 gsm tone paper
Size: 10 1/2" H x 8" W

Status: available


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© Dhruba Mazumder, 2014. All rights reserved. Should not be copied, modified, reproduced, printed in any format and size without the prior written permission of the copyright holder.

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Let's Catch a Little Sun - WIP stages explained.

This post is to share the work-in-progress at various stages how the painting 'Let's Catch a Little Sun' was developed in watercolor.
Fig 01
To begin with, a clear tonal value study was done prior the start of the painting to finalize the composition in terms of distribution of light and dark shapes over the available rectangular space, [Fig 01]. The thumbnail sketch needs not to be a detailed one however it should have enough information to be able to use it as a road map to develop the watercolor painting. It helps to reduce any confusion about tonal value placement in the middle of the painting. Based on the value sketch, a very light outline was marked on the water color paper to place the main element. The paper used here was a 300 gsm [140 lb] Fabriano cold pressed paper which has medium surface texture. The paper is securely taped with masking tape on a drawing board.
 
Fig 02
A very loose and juicy wash was laid from the top left corner of the paper letting it flow downward taking advantage of gravity while keeping the board at an angle, [Fig 02]. Various cool and warm colors were allowed to mix and mingle directly on the paper to keep them vibrant and fresh. While top edge of the geese was painted with a hard edge to define the catching light against dark, the bottom portion was painted over the edge and inside to merge with the background. This helps to maintain the play of soft and hard edges at later stages of a painting,

Fig 03

The wash was continued towards the bottom right side including the underside of the geese all in one go to keep soft blending of various colors, [Fig 03]. At this stage it is important to consider the various underlying color placements as they will show through layers of transparent washes later on and will maintain a harmony as well freshness. It is also important to 'preserve' the white of the paper as the lightest value as per the value sketch right from the beginning. Though small portions of the white paper can be brought back to light by lifting colors while it is still damp or even after it has dried, it is very hard to get back to the pure white paper once color is applied and specially if stained pigments are used. Notice the bold splatters towards the bottom portion of the painting. This Simple approach helps to create textures and interest without dominating the main focus.

Fig 04
Once the first wash has dried completely, the 1st layer of dark green foliage is applied again from the top left corner of the paper, [Fig 04]. This layer was also painted with loose brush strokes. The few areas which missed the brush marks conveys some leaves catching light on the dark background. It also helps adding some interest on that big darker shape.

Fig 05
The challenge of this painting was to maintain that sharp light by painting juicy dark pigments without loosing the overall vibrancy of the painting. Also to capture the beautiful and bright reflected light and the form shadow on the white geese without adding much details. Starting from the orange beak, continuing through the head, neck, chest, the feathers through the bright orange legs towards the casting shadow on the ground was painted as a connected shape, [Fig 05]. Care was taken to maintain tonal values and changes of color temperatures. Notice how the feet are merged together with the ground giving the illusion of one single shape.

Fig 06
Added some definitions on the feathers catching light and creating form shadows, underside of the body, the legs and enhanced the cast shadow to balance with dark shape from the top left side of the painting, [Fig 06]. Extra care needs to be taken at these final stages of the painting to avoid over working and keeping off extra brush marks which may ruin the freshness of the painting after the initial hard work.

Fig 07
The dark was enhanced from top left corner towards bottom to create contrast near the head as this is main focal area of the painting, [Fig 07]. Also splatters were added to the bottom of the dark shape to connect with the ground with similar textures. The tone and intensity of the beak was enhanced to capture the back lite effect as well the bright reflected light. The eye was defined and it was time to sign off the painting.

It was a pleasant experience and I hope you enjoyed the stages as much as I did while painting through them. If you have any suggestions, feel free to leave your comments down below. Thanks for going through the post :)!

Medium: watercolor on paper
Size: 13 ½ “ H x 9” W


Original reference picture courtesy by Smitha Shivaswamy. Thanks Smitha.

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© Dhruba Mazumder, 2014. All rights reserved.

Tuesday, June 24, 2014

An Experimentation with Watercolor

The saying is that, If you do not dare to experiment, you may never know what you can achieve and it may not necessarily be a solid 'success' every single time. But, what if you can get something worth as a final result, that may be the bonus! The path traveled for the first time is mostly exciting in spite of the difficulties faced. However the joy is to stay positive without expecting an end results and enjoy the unknown. Not all roads leads to a final destination but the experience can still be worth a try.

Here's what I did with one of the demo watercolor piece from the last watercolor workshop I had conducted in Chennai. I was showcasing various techniques of watercolors and ended up with few papers which has hardly anything but patches of colors. As I am always on for experimentation I wanted to do something which I have never tried before. I convinced myself I had nothing to loose as it was not a finish piece of art.

Fig 01
This one is a quarter size paper where I demonstrated two different approaches for 'wet-in-wet' techniques and back-run/bloom/cauliflower effect [Fig 01]. I did not wanted to throw this away or keep lying around. On this kind of situations, I generally come back later on to establish some shapes of tonal values and colors on top of the existing ones to see if anything I can further develop. I'll do another post on that topic some other day :)! this time I decided to wash off the existing colors to see what remains and what can be done.

Fig 02
After keeping the paper wet thoroughly for sometime, I used a big soft flat brush to wash off the colors as much as possible [Fig 02]. You need to be gentle and careful at this step so the 'external sizing' of the paper is not damaged. You can also notice if you have used staining pigments in earlier stages, they wont come off completely from the paper while others will clear. Satisfied with what I got here, I let it to dry keeping flat on a board.

Fig 03
This is the exciting stage to start a new painting on top of a washed off paper. Here you can notice, I did a economical line drawing to go for the new painting [Fig - 03]. I was excited as there were under wash of colors which was completely not planned for the new painting.

Fig 04
For this exercise I decide to use this tonal study [Fig 04]. This is a quick and random graphite sketch I did earlier to study shapes of light and shade within a composition and I considered this will be nice one to use in this exercise as it's relatively a simple. The reason for using a simple concept is I was still unaware how the paper is going to react when I start laying the fresh washes again after it had been washed off and dried once before.
Fig 05
Here's the final watercolor [title: One] I achieved after repainting on the washed off paper. I decided to use similar family of colors which were used for the earlier demonstration purpose to keep the colors fresh [avoiding muddy result]. I was happy for what I finally ended up with, from nowhere to a finished painting, This exercise helped me building my confidence that even if a watercolor painting goes wrong considering the fact that it's an unforgiving medium, there's always hopes to work it around to either bring life back into it [there are various ways :)] or be brave, wash it off and start fresh again! Doing a new painting on top of a 'not so successful' painting is not a new thing and practiced regularly on other mediums however watercolor is delicate because of the paper used as surface and the transparency of pigments.

Few things I observed from this exercise are:

  • This is suitable to practice on a better quality paper with good internal and external sizing.
  • Hand made papers may not be suitable as the pulps may become weak easily after a thorough wash.
  • The paper should be wash carefully not to disturb the external sizing however it will still become a little weak and the colors may bleed in areas even while using as 'wet on dry'.
  • You need to be aware of the pigments used in the first stages. Staining pigments are hard to get off paper.
  • As there are colors remaining from the previous wash, use colors wisely [warm/cool] to avoid muddy results. Remember, watercolors is transparent and what is there underneath will show through successive top layers.
I encourage you to try this exercise to see what you can achieve. If nothing much, you'll still know you can work around a flailed painting to a completely new one. We do not pain successfully every single time, right! All the best!

I would love to hear about your views, comments and experiences. Feel free write in the comment section below.

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© Dhruba Mazumder, 2014. All rights reserved.

Wednesday, June 18, 2014

Birthday Bouquet

Kindly click on the image for a bigger view
Title: Birthday Bouquet
 

 Medium: Watercolor on 300 gsm Cold pressed paper
Size:
14" H x 10" W
 

Status: Available.
Price: On request.

If you are interested to own this beautiful watercolor painting, Kindly leave a comment here. Alternatively you can also send a message on my facebook art page from the link below
www.facebook.com/dhrubamazumderfineart

Or mail me at:

dhrubafinearts[at]gmail[dot]com
 
© Dhruba Mazumder, 2014. All rights reserved.

Saturday, June 07, 2014

One

Kindly click on the image for a bigger version
Title: One

Medium: Watercolor on 300 gsm Cold pressed paper
Size: 14" H x 9 1/2" W

Status: Available

Price: On request.




If you are interested to own this beautiful watercolor, Kindly leave a comment here. Alternatively you can also send a message on my facebook art page from the link below
www.facebook.com/dhrubamazumderfineart

Or mail me at:

dhrubafinearts[at]gmail[dot]com
 
© Dhruba Mazumder, 2014. All rights reserved.

Thursday, May 08, 2014

Sunshine

Kindly click on the image for a larger view
Title: Sunshine

Medium: Watercolor on handmade paper
Size: 8 1/2" H x 12" W

Status: Available

Price: Kindly send leave a comment here or mail at

dhrubafinearts[at]gmail.[dot]com

© Dhruba Mazumder, 2014. All rights reserved
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Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Small flower painting available for sale


It's time for those beautiful flowers all around! This small flower painting is available for personal collection or you can also give it as a gift to your dear ones. Feel free to leave a comment here or write a mail to know more about this !

Title: Purple and Blue
Medium: watercolor in 300 gsm archival paper
Size: 6 3/4" H x 4 1/2" W [painting area]

Status: Available for sale.

Kindly leave a comment here or mail at -

dhrubafinearts[at]gmail[dot]com

© dhruba mazumder, 2014. All rights reserved.
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Tuesday, February 04, 2014

Color swatehces - a study

Fellow watercolor artist Nirupam Konwar has recently posted this beautiful, moody and atmospheric image clicked early in the morning hours from his native in Assam and it immedietly caught my attention. It has limited but nice color range. I did a small exercise of picking up the existing colors into swatches, both warm and cool hues and also analyzed their postion in tonal value scale from light to dark. These kind of exersize can help to simplify and narrow down the color range to a limited palette creating harmonious color combinations. Also the grey values help to build the solid underlying structure bringing out the more saturated hues inside the picture. Hopefully I will post a quick sketch based on these studies soon.

Original picture courtesy Nirupam Konwar.

© dhruba mazumder, 2014. all rights reserved
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Monday, January 27, 2014

Inspirational sketch

"there are inspirations for art everywhere all the time. it's up to us how we respond to these inspirations, by contemplating and expressing in our own ways."

while traveling yesterday morning, i noticed this person with a selling cart under the beautiful morning light. it was a glimpse of only few seconds from a distance as i was riding and had to bring my focus back on road. however the quick glimpse was good as i could grab only the essence of it rather than focusing any details. after coming back home i did a very quick, rough sketch trying to put the vague image on paper. satisfied with what i got, i did another bigger sketch with added elements to it.

medium: watercolor on paper.
size: 9" H x 7" W
time: 50 min. approx.
source: from memory

© dhruba mazumder, 2014. all rights reserved
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Wednesday, January 15, 2014

A little bit about Artistic Block

artistic block is a term where one get stuck without much inspirations to work on, self doubt, lack of creative influence, failing to express etc. leaving a person blank. this can be momentary, few days, weeks or even months if not years. it gives the feeling that, all the creativity is over and we cant do anymore expressive works, we are finished in artistic term. however if we think positively, this is also a good time to experiment, experience and learn new things and scale new horizons with very less expectations. this can be either experimenting with a completely new medium, approach and style, subject, working time letting yourself more open towards experimenting new things with much less expectations for end results unlike of regular artworks that you have been doing so far. this may be the correct time to browse through the inspirations that you have always tried to explore. you may never know what new ability you could discover of yourself just because that you have never given the chance to experiment.

a very quick experimental sketch based on a profile picture of Kruttika Susarla. thanks Kruttika for the pic.

watercolor on awoen sketchbook.
size: 7 1/2" H x 5" w approx.
time: 35 min approx.
source: from reference pic.

© dhruba mazumder, 2014

Monday, January 13, 2014

On location at Varkala Beach, Kerala.

this one is from beautiful Varkala, Kerala. there's a pure joy when one sketch/draws/paints on location as you can feel the atmosphere, sound etc around you, hence the other senses are also connected to it and keeps the artwork even more refreshing in one's memory.

medium: watercolor on cartridge paper sketchbook

© dhruba mazumder, 2014. all rights reserved.
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Sunday, January 12, 2014

On location viewing UB city, Bangalore

found an old on location picture from last year after the completed sketch along with the subject.

watercolor on sketchbook
size: 9" H x 7" W

this beautiful picture is courtesy Priya Sebastian. thanks priya!! you can check her illustrations at Priya Sebastian's Illustrations!!


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 © dhruba mazumder, 2014. all rights reserved

Saturday, January 11, 2014

As the colors flow

a quick water color study today. wanted to pain as loose as possible with more suggestive brush marks than defined elements.

medium: watercolor on canson paper
size: 9" H x 7" W
time: 30 min approx.

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 © dhruba mazumder, 2014. all rights reserved

Wednesday, January 08, 2014

Another source of inspiration






a sneak peak about my source of inspirations for these kind of quick sketches. there is always something interesting around you to capture in the paper. for me, it's the play of light and dark abstract shapes that catch my attention at any place and time that inspires me most, a thing i can't ignore ! it's a good idea to give another closer look at these shapes trying to observe them in abstract manner and not as simple subjects what we are logically aware of. and if you still find them interesting it's the right time to do that quick sketch!!

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 © dhruba mazumder, 2014. all rights reserved

Friday, December 06, 2013

From doodles to final painting - stage by stage approach.

sometimes my original paintings are based on ideas generated from random and quick doodles done in fun way. here's an example how the idea was conceived for the watercolor painting 'Deep in the woods'.

kindly click on the image to view a bigger version. thanks!!


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 © dhruba mazumder, 2013. all rights reserved

Saturday, February 02, 2013

Let's catch a little Sun


This is the first painting of 2013, done in watercolor. This work is available for purchase.

medium: watercolor
size: 14" H x 9" W

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 © dhruba mazumder, 2013. all rights reserved

Thursday, January 24, 2013

The first watercolor from 2013!

My first water color of 2013. yah, its been almost 2 weeks and I had been busy with some commission paintings and I had to get involved doing sketches to loosen up from those commission works. finally I could begin working on own water color pieces for this year and here it is :)!!

medium: watercolor on 300 gms, cold press fabriano paper
size: 9 1/4" x 13 1/2"
source: from a reference pic provided by smitha.

Kindly click on the image below for a bigger and better version. thanks for viewing :)!






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 © dhruba mazumder, 2013. all rights reserved

Monday, December 31, 2012

wish u everybody a very very happy new year 2013!! hope the coming year brings u good health, prosperity, success, love and most importantly, lots of peace and joy!! do lots of artworks and share the joy :)!!!


 
 
HAPPY NEW YEAR, 2013!!!



well, here are few more of this years artworks. had trouble uploading together. so adding them  as 2nd post. :) cheers!!

















thanks for viewing :)!!
its been a more than year since i updated this blog. its been an excellent year in terms of fine art as i did lots of on location sketching and paintings. got the chance to work on a commission project as well as the first water color workshop too!

here are few of the many art works that i did this year. hopefully the new year 2013 will be even more brighter for everybody. keep sketching, drawing and painting!! cheers and wish u everybody a very very happy new year :)!!!

























thanks for ur viewing :)!!!