Friday, August 16, 2013

When is a painting finished?

This question has plagued artists for centuries.
It is the culmination of questions such as:
Is there too much detail?
Is there too little detail?
Is it too dark or too light?
Does the hue reflect the mood?
And you could probably add a dozen more questions.

I "finished" this painting and signed it.

The next morning, the thin background tree was bothering me. So, I took it out. The more I looked at the piece, the more the background bothered me. I made the mountain more purple-y from its brighter blue and painted in a lot of trees. Finished. Hmm. Still not right.

OK, time for some drastic modification. I grabbed my palette knife (which I only use to mix paint) and scraped off a large section of background. I thought moving the horizon line down would add focus to the cat. Painting in more sky, I also softened the mountain/sky intersection.

Now to the rest of the background. I had originally painted in some light greens which while pretty, did nothing for my new plan. Out they came. A lot of dabbling in the background, trying various colors. Every few minutes I would step back to look at the piece. My mind was starting to fill in background objects from slight hints of shapes. Yes, this is the right direction. I continued to play with colors and textures until I was "finished."

It can be a little scary to scrape off a thoughtfully painted section, but I have learned to not fall in love with my own brushstrokes. The end result is what I am after and if that means altering my carefully developed plan and working by intuition, the palette knife is there to help.



Heartbeat
12" X 9"
Original Oil


2 comments:

  1. OMGosh, Linda. This is amazing!
    This is definitely one of my favorites...!!!! Gorgeous piece!!!

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  2. Oh, thanks so much for your comment. It is encouraging to receive praise when I changed it so much from my original concept.

    ReplyDelete