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Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

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Page 1: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

Creating Depth in a Paintingby Linda Hammons

Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

Page 2: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

These techniques can be used to create depth in a painting whether it is

a landscape or a still life.

1) Layering objects….

Page 3: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

2. Fading of colors….

Page 4: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

3) Size of objects - get smaller in distance

Page 5: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

4) Bluer, cooler in distance, but skies warmer toward horizon

Page 6: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

5)Less detail on distant things and lots of detail on close things

Page 7: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

6) Exaggerated perspective, like making a pathway or road very narrow in the distance and wide in the

forefront, more so than it would really be

Page 8: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

7) Warm colors come toward you and cool recede (surround warm center of interest color with cool

color)

Page 9: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

8) Edges less defined (lost) in the distance and very crisp and sharp in area near to you

Page 10: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

9) Dark recedes, light comes toward you (dark around light, cool around warm, make painting

look 3D)

Page 11: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

Lets use these general principles to create a ‘Torn Landscape’…..

This is a great idea for paintings that just never reached their potential! But remember…..just because you don’t like it, doesn’t mean someone else wouldn’t love it! It might ‘speak to them’ from across a crowded room…..(I know I hear music in the background)

Page 12: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

1) First, you have the choice of a ‘vertical’ composition or a ‘horizontal’ one. We usually think of landscapes as horizontal, but vertical is very effective as well. In torn landscapes it gives us the opportunity to use wider layers and more layers.

Note the use of ‘letters’ sideways as the texture in this strip!

Rice paper

Page 13: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

The horizontal lines divide the scene into layers and produce a restful effect. The eye normally travels from left to right, and steadily upwards through the scene.

• Don’t put your horizon in the middle of the page, above or below ok.

• Don’t forget….a center of interest (or area of interest) on a sweet spotBefore we continue lets look at some other examples of torn landscapes….then we’ll build our own!

Page 14: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

Note this example is a created with many small torn pieces placed in random angles. It seems to incorporate pieces, the flowers, torn from a magazine or a photograph as well. These could easily have been painted flowers torn into various shapes and placed in the desired arrangement.

Page 15: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

This painting, ‘Seascape’, was created by tearing the paper in a way that left a white edge of various thicknesses and shapes to simulate wave tops.

Page 16: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

‘The Hills are Alive with Color’This is one of my painting (or parts of a number of my paintings!) that I created several years ago.

I painted the underlying paper before placing the strips I had torn on it. Notice that I tried to create a rather zig zaggy pattern in the strips to give you eye a path to follow up the painting.

I put the tearings with the most texture nearest the bottom, closest to me in the landscape. I positioned the sun to match the yellows and golds in the upper tearings.

Where I didn’t have a white line I wanted, I added it.This is about 14” high so you can see

how wide the strips are.

Page 17: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

This is another torn landscape of mine, but in this one I painted tissue and when dry torn it into the shapes I wanted.

You take artists’ tissue (acid free) and place a sheet on an opened garbage bag. Then you can paint with a brush gently, or stamp and watercolor, or spray, drip, throw, sand color pencils or any other way. Be careful not to tear the tissue. It is VERY fragile when wet. When dry remove from garbage bag.

Page 18: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

This one by an unknown artist incorporates the white edges in the background sky area and gently added pen work to the land area and the details closest to us. Very simple and yet very effective and beautiful!

Page 19: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

• So first, decide on vertical or horizontal• You may already have a picture in mind and

will tear your papers with that in mind.• Usually you will tear without a specific picture

in mind and as you arrange and rearrange your tearings, you will develop a painting in your mind.

• Generally you are creating tearings in strips to start. Don’t make them too thin! At least a couple of inches wide. You can tear later into smaller or thinner strips or reshape them.

Page 20: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

• If you want a White Edge….hold the dry paper flat with your left hand and tear the paper with your right hand, pulling up, you will leave a white edge on the flat paper.

Page 21: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

• We are making a landscape, but you can create any kind of painting you want even a portrait!

• For a landscape, start laying out your strips. Remember, warmer land or water closer to you, cooler as it moves back away from you. Details are close to you, smoother, fewer details farther away. For your skies, cooler at top and warmer close to horizon. Look back over the principles we talked about at the beginning. Remember, everything is relative to everything! A cool yellow is cooler than a warm yellow! Warms come toward you, cool away.

Page 22: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

• Step back when you think you are done and look at the collage painting you have created. You need to lay it on the floor to get a look at it if it is not tacked down with masking tape. Look over the principles we discussed one last time. Ask yourself, do you have a center or area of interest that the viewer will return to? Remember, you can add texture with your paints, watercolor pencils, pens, or stencils. You might also need to add another tearing to get the look right.

Page 23: Creating Depth in a Painting by Linda Hammons Make your paintings look more 3 dimensional, not flat!

My start! (With collages papers)

When you are satisfied with yours, glue it down, put something heavy on it until dry, and sign it! You have created a watercolor collage!

Please, take a handout!