PAINT A STILL LIFE
WHY PRACTICE PORTRAITURE?
The portrait is one of the most difficult exercises in oil painting. It is important to start with a preparatory drawing, either in pencil, charcoal or directly in oil paint.
WHAT IS CHIAROSCURO?
Chiaroscuro is a technique that consists of recreating the light of a scene, by creating contrasting dark and light parts on your canvas. To work on this technique and place shadows correctly on your canvas, accentuate the shadows in your composition by placing a desk lamp on one side of the subject. This lighting will create cast shadows and reveal chiaroscuro.
START WITH SHAPES
To recreate this scene on canvas, begin by sketching out the simplified shapes of each object. Start with a circle for the globe and a triangle for the foot of the candlestick. Once you’ve placed the shapes, refine the lines to define the subject and replace the geometric shapes with the drawing.
SETTING UP YOUR SCENE
Before you can paint your still life, you need to compose your scene. First select your objects; fruit baskets, crockery, decorative objects and books are all ideal subjects. Next, place your objects against a neutral background, either a sheet, tablecloth, wallpaper or a white wall. Add a desk lamp on one side if necessary, to create exaggerated shadows.
SHADOW AREAS
The chiaroscuro technique is the recreation of a twilight scene. To create chiaroscuro, apply dark layers by area, then gradually light up the scene with yellow ochre.
THE COLOURFUL COMPOSITION
To bring out the elements of the composition, use colour combinations. Here Olivier has used royal blue for the globe, a grey for the candle holder and a zinc white with ochre to define the skull. After this stage, add light to the image by working in the shadows, using Payne's grey, rex blue and cadmium red.
WATCH THE VIDEO
VIEW THE PROGRAMME
Click on the arrows to see available tutorials
FIND OUR PRODUCTS
OUR SHOPS
Use our store locator to find your nearest stockist.