A course for beginners and improvers

Working from direct observation, students at all levels will be encouraged to explore different uses of paint and colour to respond to shapes, colours, surface textures and reflections and negative shapes as revealed by light. 

Scheme of Work for Beginners

Klein Across the Gardens

1/ Drawing with colour and a brush, blocking in and redrawing with a paint brush.

2/ Wet into wet, wet over dry and glazing techniques..

2/ Accurate colour mixing with a warm/cold colour palette

3/Using a viewfinder to help compose your image.

4/ Allowing light to form the shapes and negative spaces within your painting

5/ Using a neutral earth textured ground/substrate rather than white.

6/ Assessing what is working and what needs to change. Using a mirror as a corrective aid.

7/ Working quickly as a help to understanding composition intuitively.

8/ Using a larger flat baker’s brush on the length, in order to cover larger areas and the corner of the brush to add detail to shapes

9/ Working with composition and making sure, all of the surface of the painting is active including negative shapes and corners of the painting.

10/ How to negotiate making a painting within specific time constraints arriving at a sustained conclusion.

11/ Selecting other artists work to study and develop working practices from.

Intermediate Students

Klein Easter Cactus

Through ongoing iterative practice students will be learning the following:

1/ Drawing with colour and a brush, blocking in and redrawing with a paint brush.

 2/ Allowing light to form the shapes and negative spaces within your painting as much as the objects you are looking at.

 3/ Learning to selectively look and paint from what you see and challenging what you know.

 4/ Assessing what is working and what needs to change. Using a mirror as a corrective aid.

 5/ Working quickly as a help to understanding composition intuitively.

 6/ Using a neutral earth textured ground/substrate for making sketches.

 7/ Using a larger flat baker’s brush on the length, in order to cover larger areas and the corner of the brush to add detail to shapes

 8/ Using a viewfinder to help compose your image.

9/ Wet into wet, wet over dry and glazing techniques.

10/ How to negotiate making a painting within specific time constraints arriving at a sustained conclusion.

 11/ Selecting other artists work to study and develop working practices from.

 12/ Accurate colour mixing with a warm/cold colour palette

Advanced students will be encouraged to research good painting supports and substrates that they find conducive to their way of working.

They will also be taught an understanding of pigment numbers in relation to colour and colour effects, and taught to develop a greater understanding of colour and depth in their work through the use of glazes and scumbling on work realised over 2 to 3 weeks.

An advanced student will look more carefully at how to structure a painting so that the negative spaces would count more, so that there would be no dead space across the picture surface. They would be expected to spend more time looking and understanding other paintings they find interesting, how they work and incorporating these ideas in relation to practice and technique into their own work.

Materials:

A3 (16”x12”/42x30 cm) painting boards or paper for acrylic painting. (We tend to go through one of these a week so best to buy in bulk).

A4/A5 canvas boards or primed mdf boards for small landscape studies.

A palette with a thumb hole for your non-drawing hand. Tear off paper palettes with a thumb hole are good.

2 to 3 shallow screw top jars for medium and cleaning fluid.  (Jam jars, perhaps a shallower one for the painting medium, deeper for the cleaning jar.)

In acrylic that would be water in both. In oil that would be a painting medium in one and a cleaning spirit in the other.

Go to a proper art shop like Cass art or Jacksons. Student quality paint from esteemed paint manufacturers is good as it is made in large batches and has to work by reputation, so they wouldn’t make it if students couldn’t get good results from it.

I recommend the following paints:

If working in Oils: Winton, Georgian, Cass art range or Jacksons artist’s paint.

Occasionally one could put a Professional artists’ range tube like Winsor and Newton artists paint, Jacksons professional etc or even Michael Harding but they are more saturated with coloured pigment and therefore more expensive and stronger than an equivalent student colour.

Cheaper paints like WH Smiths etc will have much more filler in them etc and to be avoided.

If working in Acrylics: Rowney System 3, Cass Art acrylic paint, Galleria.

One can buy a box of 8 colours in most of the above ranges, but try and ensure you have the following colours:

Titanium White - Cad red (hue) - Alizarin crimson - Cadmium yellow (hue) - Lemon yellow or cadmium lemon - Ultramarine blue - Coeruleum blue(hue) - Viridian or Pthalo green - Yellow ochre - Raw umber - Burnt sienna

Brushes: Flat , Round or filbert brushes 6, 8 and 12 size are good, in hog hair or brushes made from acrylic type materials. Careful of brushes that aren’t stiff enough. Daler Rowney graduate brushes are relatively cheap especially the bigger ones, and excellent I find for all levels. Stiffer hog hair brushes are easier to control.