Wednesday, September 14, 2011
Art Events this Weekend!
I have two exciting events this weekend!
Saturday, Sept 17th, 1-4pm I will be participating in a Live Painting Show at FLAX art & design on Market and Valencia Sts. in San Francisco. I'll be working on a couple of paintings including a new work in my series of "Found Portraits."
On Sunday, I open my new show at Blush! Wine Bar in the Castro (Castro and 18th Sts.). Please join me at Blush from 6-8pm as I feature nine of my paintings from the "Found Portraits" series (including the two above).
Hope to see you at one or both events!
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Illuminated Features Opening Thursday
Join me at Nova Bar and Restaurant this Thursday Aug 11, from 6-8pm for a cocktail and a view of my new paintings.
Nova Bar and Restaurant
555 2nd St.
San Francisco
Monday, August 1, 2011
Aug 11 Opening at Nova
Illuminated Features
New Paintings by Paul Morin
Meet the Artist: Thursday, August 11, 6-8pm
Nova Bar and Restaurant
555 2nd St., San Francisco
Exhibit up through October
Thursday, July 28, 2011
Hanging a show today!
Illuminated Features
New Paintings by Paul Morin
Nova Bar and Restaurant
555 2nd St.San Francisco
Now Through Oct 26th
Opening: Thursday, Aug 11 6-8pm
This is a continuation of my series of large-scale oil paintings with
silver leaf backgrounds based on found vintage images.
Above: "Aviatrix" 2011 36 x 36
Thursday, April 14, 2011
Open Studios
Cleaning
Open Studios is the time when most of us do a really good cleaning of our studios. (For some of us, it's really the only time we clean our studios!) I try to get most everything done the day before so I can have a relaxing day before everybody starts coming. The above photo is a "before" image -- to see it cleaned and presented, you'll have to stop by this weekend! Here's the info again:
Fri. April15, 6-9pm
Sat-Sun, April 16-17, 11am-6pm
1890 Bryant St. Studios, #318 (at Mariposa)
San Francisco
San Francisco
See you there!!
Monday, April 11, 2011
Open Studios This Weekend!
Yes, it's that time again (time to clean the studio!) -- Open Studios in the Mission. When I'm working in the studio, I'm completely focused on the canvas in front of me and everything else seems to take a "back seat" so I've got 6 months of detritus to deal with! Not to worry, though, I always leave the last week before Open Studios to clean up and this week is no exception. I hope all of you who are in or around San Francisco will be able to stop by this weekend -- I have lots of new work (as usual) including the painting above called "Your Future's So Bright (You Gotta Wear Shades!)" Here are the details:
Preview: Fri, April 15, 6-9pm
Open Studios: Sat-Sun, April 16-17, 11am-6pm
The 1890 Bryant St. Studios (at Mariposa)
Studio #318
While you're in the neighborhood, check out my colleagues work. There will be hundreds of studios open this weekend as part of Mission Artists United's annual Mission Open Studios. For more information and to download a free Open Studios Catalog: http://www.MissionArtistsUnited.org
Tuesday, April 5, 2011
Preview at FLAX, San Francisco
My painting, "Punk Under Gloomy Skies" will be featured all month long in the FLAX Preview Show for next week's Mission Open Studios. If you're in San Francisco, the opening is this Thurs April 7, 6-8pm at the FLAX Store on Mission at Valencia.
Mission Artists United is an organization to which I belong that seeks to raise the visibility of artists in the Mission District of San Francisco -- home to the highest concentration of artists in the city. MAU is responsible for Spring Open Studios in the Mission, and through it's relationship with Howard Flax, was able to arrange this preview show at his store. For more info about MAU and to download an Open Studios Guide go to:
http://www.missionartistsunited.org
Monday, April 4, 2011
Open Studios In Less Than 2 Weeks!!
Really?!? Less than TWO weeks?!?!
Yes my friends, I'm busy in the studio finishing up last minute paintings and trying to clean for Open Studios. The dates are:
Sat-Sun, April 16-17 from 11am-6pm with previews Fri April 15 from 6-9pm
At my studio: 1890 Bryant St. Studio #318 (at Mariposa)
Lots of new work to show including the painting above titled "X-Ray Vision" -- see you there!!
Thursday, March 31, 2011
Evolution of a Portrait -- Part 5
Finishing up!
Not much left to do but all the details take a long time! Glazing in the shadows with burnt umber, correcting any of the details in the features, re-stating highlights where needed etc.
I also added another layer to the background. When all this dried, I finished the hair and cleaned up the sweater where the background color overlapped a bit. Here is the finished product -- hope you like it:
Not much left to do but all the details take a long time! Glazing in the shadows with burnt umber, correcting any of the details in the features, re-stating highlights where needed etc.
I also added another layer to the background. When all this dried, I finished the hair and cleaned up the sweater where the background color overlapped a bit. Here is the finished product -- hope you like it:
Adam Verret
Private Collection
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Evolution of a Portrait -- Part 4
Beginning the flesh tones!
After the "rash" stage has dried I mix a flesh tone -- usually yellow ocher, vermilion and white with a touch of cerulean. This I apply in a thin wash over the underpainting. I then mix various shadow and "half" tones which I apply and blend with the flesh tone. I will then go in and paint the eyes, mouth and other details. You'll notice that the background color has changed to a deeper blue-grey. This often happens in relation to the flesh colors.
Next time finishing up!
After the "rash" stage has dried I mix a flesh tone -- usually yellow ocher, vermilion and white with a touch of cerulean. This I apply in a thin wash over the underpainting. I then mix various shadow and "half" tones which I apply and blend with the flesh tone. I will then go in and paint the eyes, mouth and other details. You'll notice that the background color has changed to a deeper blue-grey. This often happens in relation to the flesh colors.
Next time finishing up!
Friday, March 25, 2011
Evolution of a Portrait -- Part 3
Completing the underpainting.
Here is the completed underpainting with color added to the hair. I also blocked in the sweater with black. Whenever I use a solid black, I always try to add some raw umber to it. This helps with drying -- ivory black on its own can take weeks to dry!
Before I start with flesh tones, I paint in pure vermilion and blue-grey areas. This is what I affectionately call my "rash" phase. The intention is for these color patches to "glow" through the upper flesh tone layers and give a blush to the painting.
Here is the completed underpainting with color added to the hair. I also blocked in the sweater with black. Whenever I use a solid black, I always try to add some raw umber to it. This helps with drying -- ivory black on its own can take weeks to dry!
Before I start with flesh tones, I paint in pure vermilion and blue-grey areas. This is what I affectionately call my "rash" phase. The intention is for these color patches to "glow" through the upper flesh tone layers and give a blush to the painting.
Next time -- beginning the flesh!
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Evolution of a Portrait -- Part 2
The Underpainting
After the sketching in, comes the first underpainting. I work in a modified Venetian technique which divides the work of a painting into value first, then color. This, I find to be a very efficient way to produce a painting. The Venetians (Titian, etc.) tended to use black and white for their underpaintings -- I use raw umber and white. It produces a great warm grey-brown and umbers dry very fast -- usually overnight!
I like to cover the canvas in the first go even if I don't know what the final color of the background will be. I've blocked in the main light and darks, and suggested the direction of how the hair will be. The sweater is black so I just used a solid block of raw umber to darken that area. The background is a light dove grey.
Tomorrow -- Finishing the Underpainting!
After the sketching in, comes the first underpainting. I work in a modified Venetian technique which divides the work of a painting into value first, then color. This, I find to be a very efficient way to produce a painting. The Venetians (Titian, etc.) tended to use black and white for their underpaintings -- I use raw umber and white. It produces a great warm grey-brown and umbers dry very fast -- usually overnight!
I like to cover the canvas in the first go even if I don't know what the final color of the background will be. I've blocked in the main light and darks, and suggested the direction of how the hair will be. The sweater is black so I just used a solid block of raw umber to darken that area. The background is a light dove grey.
Tomorrow -- Finishing the Underpainting!
Tuesday, March 22, 2011
Evolution of a Portrait -- Part 1
This is the beginning of a portrait of Adam. This will be an oil on canvas 18 x 24 inches. I was able to get a great photo of Adam in "half-smile." To sketch the image on the canvas, I use watercolor pencils one in ocher and one in raw umber to emphasize key shadow lines. A little water and a good wipe will remove any "mistakes!"
Tomorrow -- the first underpainting!
Tuesday, March 15, 2011
Portraits in History -- Part 1 (continued)
So here is my model, Miram. If there is anyone who looks "Mediterranean" it's her! With her direct gaze and soulful eyes, she could have stepped off one of the portraits in Faiyum. So now, I had to figure out how to do flesh tones using only four colors. Just to remind you, the colors are: White, Black, Yellow Ocher, and Venetian Red.
Ocher has a poor tinting strength but the red and black are strong colors. I was able to mix a passable flesh color out of ocher, venetian red and white. The red and black together made a chestnut brown which could be added to the shadows. I also decided to use that chestnut brown for the shirt with more black in the shadows. The hair is black the irises are red and black with black pupils and the lips are red with a touch of ocher and white. I did miss my beloved vermilion especially for the lips. When thinking about the background color, I experimented with adding a touch of black to the ocher and mixing it with white. The result is a beautiful warm sage green. Here is the finished product -- I hope you like it!
Monday, March 14, 2011
Portraits in History -- Part 1
Among the painters of ancient Greece, non is considered better than Apelles. Although non of his works survive, we know of his renown through the writings of Pliny the Elder among others and he famously painted portraits of Alexander the Great and his father, Philip of Macedon. Not much is known about his style of painting and the only copies of his work are in mosaic. Pliny writes that Apelles palette consisted of only four colors -- black, white, an iron-based yellow (yellow ocher) and an iron-based red. I wanted to see if it were possible to create a credible portrait using only these four colors!
I needed an example. First I went to the known mosaics based on Apelles paintings to see if they would say anything but mosaics aren't blended -- I needed a painting! I then remembered the funerary portraits at Faiyum in Roman Egypt I saw at the Louvre and the Metropolitan in NY and sure enough -- there was the palette. The roman painters had more colors at their disposal and they show up from time to time but in the flesh especially, those four colors are used:
I decided I needed to try and re-create this style of painting. One big difference was that I would use oil instead of encaustic. The four tube colors I used were Ivory Black, Titanium White, Yellow Ocher and for the iron-based red I decided on Venetian Red for its pink hue when combined with white. Now I needed a subject. I wanted someone Mediterranean looking to keep to the theme of ancient Greece. I was thinking about all my friends when I stumbled across a photo of my friend Miriam on Facebook. I asked her if I could use the photo and then began...
Tomorrow, the process!
I needed an example. First I went to the known mosaics based on Apelles paintings to see if they would say anything but mosaics aren't blended -- I needed a painting! I then remembered the funerary portraits at Faiyum in Roman Egypt I saw at the Louvre and the Metropolitan in NY and sure enough -- there was the palette. The roman painters had more colors at their disposal and they show up from time to time but in the flesh especially, those four colors are used:
I decided I needed to try and re-create this style of painting. One big difference was that I would use oil instead of encaustic. The four tube colors I used were Ivory Black, Titanium White, Yellow Ocher and for the iron-based red I decided on Venetian Red for its pink hue when combined with white. Now I needed a subject. I wanted someone Mediterranean looking to keep to the theme of ancient Greece. I was thinking about all my friends when I stumbled across a photo of my friend Miriam on Facebook. I asked her if I could use the photo and then began...
Tomorrow, the process!
Sunday, March 6, 2011
Well, here we go!
Dara
Oil on Canvas, 2010
Here is the beginning of my blog. Let me introduce myself. I am Paul Morin, a San Francisco-based portrait artist. My work is currently on 5 continents and in the White House collection. I paint portraits, figures and landscapes and am available for commissions. My style is very "old master" with a modern sensibility -- I start with a complete underpainting and then add glazes and scumbles in local color. I feel that my work is timeless and won't look dated in 5 years like so much of what is being produced right now.
In this blog, I hope to be able to give you a look inside the process of creating a portrait and my reasons for being a portrait artist. Commissioning a portrait is something that is a bit scary -- you pay a lot of money to someone you may not know very well and hope you will get something in return that looks like you and captures your spirit . In these postings, I plan to de-mystify the process and hopefully help you understand what an amazing and gratifying experience the whole process is! At the end of the process, you are left with a small piece of immortality that you are able to hand down to future generations!
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