Saturday, May 4, 2013

3 Reasons to Paint Outdoors

Landscape painters are an unusual lot. Many painters only paint indoors and don't feel they have the time or speed to paint outdoors, but here are three good reasons to pack up the equipment and go
outside.

Being in the environment makes you feel the scene.  If all your time is spent racing around collecting photographs to use later, you're paintings will never have the sense of place and time. You need to smell the earth, feel the breeze and hear the birds before your studio painting will feel alive to the viewer.

Cameras cannot capture color or shading correctly. Today's digital cameras are great, I carry a Canon camera and I use it everyday but I know the limitations. When I use photos in the studio I only print black and white images and use them only for shape references. I use my field paintings as color references for studio paintings. If you are working on a large studio painting, consider making several plein air works of various details. You might have to spend 2-3 afternoons in one spot but when the snow is 2 feet deep and your into a large summer painting you'll thank me.

Depth perception is better outdoors. Once again, the camera cannot replace the depth you feel on site. You need to experience subtle changes in light and color in order to make your viewer feel like they are standing there with you.

Thursday, May 2, 2013

If You Paint Outside, The Ideas Will Come

Wednesday night, May 1st was The Overlook Gallery's first officially un-official  plein air paint-out for 2013. We  went to Big Bend Campground on Hwy 128, along the Colorado River for some evening painting. It had been windy all day and the weather was threatening to ruin the evening. We got to the picnic area in the campground and was delighted to find the wind was fairly light and the color on the river and canyon walls was stunning.
Getting in the car and heading out to a location is half the battle of painting outdoors. We can usually find 20 excuses to stay indoors rather than just loading the car and making an effort to get in the field. Even if the weather is rotten on site, at least you saw some country with fresh eyes and can take a few photos or thumbnail sketches home.
As we were driving out I noticed tents on the side of the road were getting thrashed by the winds, but I kept going because you don't know what will happen when you get there. As it turned out we had a great evening on the river, followed by a spectacular sunset. The next paint-out is Wednesday May 8, at the Monitor and Merrimac overlook on Hwy 313 (Canyonlands N.P. entrance north of Moab). Meet at The Overlook Gallery at 5pm. For more info: (435) 259-3861 or info@theoverlookgallery.com

Tim Morse at Big Bend, Colorado River
















Tim Morse plein air Big Bend