Today I finished what started out to be first painting of 2022. And it turned out to be one of the most challenging paintings I’ve done! It’s a market scene from the Mount Pleasant neighborhood of NW DC, near Columbia Rd and Adams Morgan. A visitor to my studio some years ago suggested I go there. Many of the houses are painted with interesting colors! But what I loved was the market and the sunflowers. I really wanted it to be about the flowers, but once you add figures (particularly in the middle) it’s very hard not to make it about them!
I decided to work on the dark UART to give the flowers a chance to “pop” and they really did! But, there was very little drawing and I had to wing it with the flowers. I made a lot of changes to the composition from the reference photo, which I’ve included. The large green awning is the smaller brown awning that is further back in the photo. There was a woman at the far right who I decided to leave out. Everything was more complex and filled with “stuff”! I added the light colored awnings from a different photo to fill space and lightly indicated vegetables on tables underneath.
The flowers were the fun part! I loved the way they stand out. The large flower in upper left is an odd red color in the photo faces left. I decided to make it orange and face right so as to keep the eye in the picture plane. I loved putting the color on the white bins that hold the flowers. I started with blues and greens, then added violet over. It became a lovely cool area of “calm” that sets off the flowers.
The image “initial completion” is where I started this morning. I had disucssed it with a friend and we both agreed that the background needed to be tamped down somehow. And that the figure on the right (with long hair) looked a little “cartoonish.” I began by darkening the head band on woman on left so that it didn’t stand out as much. Then I changed the figure on the left, taking out her headband, adding a scarf and eliminating most of the long hair. I think it’s much better now. I also reworked the background buildings, giving a sense of light and shadow. And I added light clouds to the sky to soften the line between the buildings and the sky. I also added shadows to the green awning, which was flat. And added more vegetables to the table.
That’s about it. I DO think that the flowers really stand out now, more than they did originally. And it’s clear what the painting is supposed to be about. This was a challenge of working with a lot of detail and having to make serious changes and simplifications to the photo. My winter zoom classes are going to focus on working from photos, as well as working in pastel, so this was a great exercise for me! Still room if anyone is interested. Contact me at: jeanhirons48@gmail.com Classes start the week of Jan. 31.
Cheers and Happy New Year!
Jean