Taken Under the Wing - 1/22/2013 |
Taken Under the Wing April - October 2013 |
After softening the dark edge of the wing, I sent an image into yet another competition and, you guessed it, another rejection.
That led me to conclude that this painting was way to precious to me. I needed to step back and stop looking at it as "this is as good as it gets," but rather, "how can I take this to the level I believe it can be?" So I took it to two different groups this month and asked them to look at it with a really critical eye and help me bump it up. And then I truly listened.
(A side note: your friends and fellow artists can tell when you aren't open to suggestions. When you have that "too precious" attitude about a piece of work, they aren't going to pick apart a painting.)
Here's the iteration after meeting with group 1. I moved where the wing meets the bird's body in the left hand side heron. I added more true darks and enhanced the birds' details. I also added some lights to the tree's needles.
Taken Under the Wing 1-18-2014 |
And below you can see the changes I made after meeting with group 2 on this past Friday. I did three things: I lifted some passages on the dark wing to give it variation and bounce from the other wing, I defined the legs a bit more, and (the most dramatic change) I darkened the lower right-hand area of the painting. Now I see that the earlier version has no change in the bottom 1/3 of the painting which makes it pretty uninteresting. As I look at the image below, I see that the painting is much more resolved and my eye is led in the through the painting. What do you think about this painting's evolution?
Taken Under the Wing 1-27-2014 |
I'm about to enter it in another competition. Wish me luck!
3 comments:
Wow, Margaret! Adding the dark to the lower right really makes a big difference in the balance of the painting. Wishing you the confirmation that you deserve after all this hard work.
I found you on Ruth's blog. I am an encaustic artist & friend of hers. I think I would have had to take the same journey as you. I loved the first piece. It seemed worthy of a competition to me as well. And yet, I do see the wonderful intensity and balance that the final painting brings to the table. I think that the interest level with the more defined and bolder color choices really nailed it. It is definitely a winner.
Thank you, Paula, I just sent it off to a competition yesterday. Since I sent off 2 entries, in a way, I'm competing with myself to get a painting in the WSO show! :-))
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