Wednesday, September 19, 2012

More Escalante, UT studio works on new papers

Fifty-Mile Cliffs - 9x9"
pastel on toned UArt #600
© S.Johnson
I spent a good portion of yesterday morning "processing" some of the larger sheets of various papers I have been accumulating, and getting them ready for possible inclusion for the Escalante Plein Air festival.

I had planned to take a piece of acrylic-toned UArt #400 paper that I had toned with a thick wash of sienna acrylic out yesterday to paint, but ran out of time.  Instead, I decided to experiment with smaller studio pieces.

For some reason, when Blick sent me the paper order with the incorrect surface of UArt, they also sent the incorrect size:  27x21", I think.  I ordered 18x24", which I can trim down into smaller sizes I use on location.  Anyway, to get some 9x12" and 12x16" pieces, I was left with an odd size:  this 9x9.  But, hey - it's a square, and a workable size.   I toned it with a dark warm gray acrylic wash.

I had earlier selected out this photo from our May trip, near our campsite off Hole-in-the-Rock road (HITR), of afternoon light on the Fifty-Mile Cliffs.  These cliffs, which run parallel and south of the HITR road, look most appealing to me in the late afternoon as distal bluish silhouettes.  I could easily go back out and paint at the exact location on this upcoming trip.

I painted this as if it were on location:  quickly, no fussing with details.   It handled so much better than the #400 or Wallis, in terms of not having an overly aggressive surface; it may even be the Goldilocks of the sanded pastel paper continuum, at least for me.  I'm betting I'll also dig the #800 surface.

Next, two small and quick studies on Artagain paper, from trimmings, surface prepared with #400 wet-dry sandpaper:

Wash Study - 6x3"
Artagain "Moonstone"
Verdict:  love it.  Turquoise skies look great on this paper.

Boulder, UT study - 3x6"
Artagain "Gothic Gray"
Another winner (the paper, not the painting).

I could easily paint this same view - overlooking the small town of Boulder, UT, south from Hwy 24 - on this trip.  I got to use several of the new MV pastels I ordered, including the two dark greens and those sandstone colors in this study.

8 comments:

  1. These are all so pretty, Sonya! I really love the Artagain Moonstone piece. Wow, your turquoise sky just pops against the earthy reds of the landscape. Beautiful works!

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  2. Love the Fifty Mile Cliffs painting! The colors and depth are just amazing.

    It is interesting to hear about your experiments with the different papers and paper colors - they have such different effects with the pastels - part of what makes pastels such an intriguing medium!

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  3. Darla, thank you, as always, for your supportive comments. I am hoping I find the right scene to do a turquoise sky on this trip using this paper :).

    Debbie - thanks so much; the colors and depth were what grabbed me, and I am glad I was able to capture them in the painting. The afternoon light does amazing things to this landscape, that is for sure!

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  4. All beautiful. I'm especially fond of the little 3x6 study. All nice colors. Interesting you got the wrong paper, but nice for experimenting.

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  5. These are all so lovely. I can't say which one I like best! I do like the elongated shapes of the bottom two. It makes for a different perception.

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  6. Thanks so much, Ruth. I really enjoy the panoramic formats for landscapes, and they are particularly well-suited to such open, sweeping landscapes.

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Your thoughtful comments add value to this blog - thank you so much for taking the time to leave them!

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