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    If you haven't seen the two-DVD set, "The Impressionists", you don't know what you're missing!

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    I rented it from Netflix and absolutely loved it. It is an enactment of the lives of Monet, Renoir, Manet, Cezanne, Degas, and other Impressionist painters living at that time around Paris. Fascinating and eye-opening!


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10×10″, Gouache in my kraft paper sketchbook

As you can see, I’m still having way too much fun with gouache in my new sketchbook. I know the text can be difficult to read when I post these pages from my sketchbook. Here’s what today’s page says:

It’s not often that I paint from photos, and it’s even less often that I paint from photos I didn’t take myself! However, this weekend’s Wetcanvas WDE (Weekend Drawing/Painting Event) had some that I just couldn’t resist. Seeing them here now in gouache makes me wonder if I should have painted them in acrylics or oils on a more archival support, or at least so they could be taken out and popped into little frames. Maybe I’ll do another version of these.

Seeing how these gouache landscapes look on this paper makes me think that this could be a fabulous way to work en plein air. I did both of these with only a single, round synthetic brush and a pre-filled Mejillo palette. Pre-cut Canson boards, or other archival matboards with a a similar color to this, would also be lightweight and easy to travel with. They dry instantly, and could be stored in a plastic zip-lock bag for protection.

You can click here to see the reference images uploaded by Wetcanvas member “Upnorthtim”. You can see that I made a lot of changes to the photos in content and composition. Sometimes I do stay more true to a photo, but I never hesitate to change elements, leave things out, or move them around to create my own vision, or to change color and sometimes values. It’s where and how we use that artistic license that creates our individual styles and preferences.

Every Friday, a Wetcanvas member is host of a Weekend Drawing Event in which they upload 16 photos. Members have a week to create art from those photos and post it to the forum. They are not supposed to spend longer than two hours on a painting. Give it a try sometime! It’s great fun to see what so many different artists can do with the same set of images.

3 Responses to “Landscape Sketches”

I am loving your most recent sketches. If you don’t mind telling, what weight of paper is in your sketchbook? I’m noticing that the paper doesn’t buckle under the paint. I love watercolors, but they always make my sketchbook paper lumpy!

Lisa, gouache requires less water than watercolors. It is generally used about the consistency of heavy cream, so the paper doesn’t have as much of a tendency to buckle. However, heavy applications on paper can crack easily.

That being said, this is indeed heavy paper! It’s one of the things that grabbed me about this sketchbook right from the start. I’d guess the paper weight to be at least 100 lb. stock. They had smaller books with much thinner kraft paper too. This was the only one I found with the very thick paper.
Jamie

Thanks Jamie! I’ve never used gouache, but I think I’d like to try it. Those colors are so rich! Thank you for the heads up about the paint cracking if applied too thickly.

I love heavy paper. It tolerates so much more abuse than the skimpy stuff that’s usually in sketchbooks. Heh, I think there’s a bookbinding project in my future.

Enjoy that yummy paper!

Something to say?