If asked, what is the first thing you look for in a model?
Without hesitation I can answer that it is the face that first attracts. This
holds true, even though in my paintings the face is secondary to the figure and
sometimes it is not shown at all. Nevertheless, the spirit of my muse is personified
in her fleeting glance. Here lie her subtle moods and changes.
In the first painting from today's session, the face is visible albeit
partially cover by the model’s shoulder.
In the second foreshortened figure, the upturned face is
nothing more than a suggestive brush stroke. Fleetingly though it may be, it nonetheless
allows the dark red of the lips to give continuity, first to the breasts
and then to the toes.
Incidentally, both were painted in little more than the time it took for my model to turn from one side to the other.
I suppose it is because the face has such a capacity to broadcast emotions - you only need a brushstroke (or in the case of some of my old rescanned photographs, a blur of movement) and you have a chapters' worth of emotional narrative.
ReplyDeleteGood work, keep it up, Karl Burnett
ReplyDelete