Anyway, without further ado, here's my set up:
I've customized my easel a bit so that I wouldn't have to keep reaching for my weapons of choice, these preferred brushes and the paper towel roll to wipe them with. I figured I could either shell out the big bucks for another easel just like mine that happened to have the cups and the roll attached, or I could just use what I had around the house to fashion my own. I bought a hole saw and attached it to my power drill, found some thin craft wood boards and cut holes that were just about the same size as the mouths of these mason jars. I then screwed the mason jars onto the boards and then bolted the board/jar combo to the easel. Voila. The towel roll holder is the standard kind you often find installed under kitchen cabinets. I just bolted a board onto the easel and then bolted the roll holder onto that.
At this point, I've primed my canvas and I've got enough thumbnail sketches drawn out to know exactly how I want to begin. That's the key, after all: knowing thoroughly how to begin while leaving the ending up to chance. The image I had in mind was of two bulls locking horns. Again, while it might have been much more eye-catching to depict them at a dynamic angle, I chose to paint them straight on, showing their profiles equally, creating a symmetrical arc.
At this point, I've roughed in all the major compositional elements I need. I can now comfortably switch gears and think about texture. Here are just a few of the tools, beside the usual brushes and palette knives, at my disposal:
All of these -- sponges, steel wool, various combs, sandpaper, solvent -- can create all sorts of interesting textures. I began by laying down swaths of color, incompletely mixed, with a large brush and a palette knife. Once the area was covered, I went back in with thicker paint, straight out of the tube without medium, and broke it up with the above tools.
The paint is still rather wet in this photo so the texture doesn't show very well. But it definitely reads when you look at the real thing.
Now, back to the bulls.
And, again, some foreground texture.
At this point, I had to put it up for a while and give some thought about how to handle the home stretch. This is the ending left to change I was talking about before. Too often, I find myself wanting to rush to the end and I end up over-painting the thing or painting it to death, as they say. So I've made a habit of stopping just short of being "finished" and letting it sit out of view for a while so that I may revisit it with fresher, more objective eyes later. This one took about a month out of view before I went back to it. I ended up changing the color dynamics a bit, adding more grays, greens, and yellows to the background and varying the hues in the hides of the bulls a bit more. I'm out of time right now but I'll take a photo soon and post the most recent incarnation of this painting soon!
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