jeanne mackenzie: winter landscape plein...

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I have been drawn to the immediacy of painting on location for many years. Whether it is a quick study or a completed painting, painting from life only enhances my studio work. Capturing the scene at hand (en plein air) and all at once (alla prima) forces me to make quick decisions on value, color and composition. For me it hones the powers of observation. Because I travel with my paints- teaching national and international workshops as well as attending plein air events- I was really excited to try the new DANIEL SMITH Water Soluble Oils. Shortly after I received my DANIEL SMITH Water-Soluble Oils, we had a sudden, unusually heavy snowstorm with 18 inches here in Colorado. I wondered how the Water-Soluble Oils would handle the cold tempera- tures, and I decided this would be a fun opportunity to get introduced to these paints. I choose my subject, some snow laden evergreen trees with cottonwoods in the distance, and looked for an interesting composi- tion. While at first glance it looks as if I was deep in the snowy Rockies, I was actually within walking distance to my studio, close to town. I set up my easel and squeezed out the colors I choose for my subject onto my wood palette. JEANNE MACKENZIE: Winter Landscape Plein Air with DANIEL SMITH Water Soluble Oils

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Page 1: JEANNE MACKENZIE: Winter Landscape Plein Airdanielsmith.com/wp-content/uploads/MacKenzie_WinterWaterSol.pdf · 8 ) The distant cottonwood trees were painted with a thinner paint

I have been drawn to the immediacy of painting on location for many years. Whether it is a quick study or a completed painting, painting from life only enhances my studio work. Capturing the scene at hand (en plein air) and all at once (alla prima) forces me to make quick decisions on value, color and composition. For me it hones the powers of observation.

Because I travel with my paints- teaching national and international workshops as well as attending plein air events- I was really excited to try the new DANIEL SMITH Water Soluble Oils.

Shortly after I received my DANIEL SMITH Water-Soluble Oils, we had a sudden, unusually heavy snowstorm with 18 inches here in Colorado. I wondered how the Water-Soluble Oils would handle the cold tempera-tures, and I decided this would be a fun opportunity to get introduced to these paints. I choose my subject, some snow laden evergreen trees with cottonwoods in the distance, and looked for an interesting composi-tion. While at first glance it looks as if I was deep in the snowy Rockies, I was actually within walking distance to my studio, close to town.

I set up my easel and squeezed out the colors I choose for my subject onto my wood palette.

JEANNE MACKENZIE: Winter Landscape Plein Airwith DANIEL SMITH Water Soluble Oils

Page 2: JEANNE MACKENZIE: Winter Landscape Plein Airdanielsmith.com/wp-content/uploads/MacKenzie_WinterWaterSol.pdf · 8 ) The distant cottonwood trees were painted with a thinner paint

When outdoors I like to work with a limited palette. I chose the following DANIEL SMITH colors:

Titanium White,Cadmium Yellow Light Hue,Cadmium Yellow Medium Hue,Quinacridone Gold,Cadmium Red Medium Hue,Alizarin Crimson,French Ultramarine,Burnt Sienna,Viridian, andSap Green

I sometimes will leave a green off but I wanted to try the two greens. I thought that I was putting out a yellow ochre but it turned out to be a Quinacridone Gold. This turned out to be a happy mistake and the color was a rich yellow.

For the Water Soluble Oils I had one container of water to use for thinning the oils and for cleaning my brushes. In an-other container was the Water Soluble Linseed Oil. As I usually don’t use a medium, when I use regular oils, I wanted to see if these paints needs the extra push.

On my easel I set out a canvas panel and began toning it with burnt sienna thinned a little water. Normally, I would have thinned the paint with odorless mineral spirits to tone my substrate. I enjoyed the fact that I only needed to use water. I travel a lot, and being able to use the local water instead of trying to purchase turpentine and odorless mineral spirits would be a great advantage.

1) When I started to paint my subject, I tried to divide my canvas into uneven shapes. It was not about the trees, but the shapes and how you can invite the viewer into, and around, the scene. After toning the canvas I began, with a small brush, drawing in the shapes with the Burnt Sienna thinned a little with water.

2) I began adding in the darks of the trees because they will act as anchors in the painting. The Sap Green and touch of Alizarin Crimson worked nicely for the darks. The ‘light’ side of the tree, which was also part of the dark shape, was Sap Green and Quinacridone Gold.

3) I started adding the first bit of shadow snow with brush strokes of French Ultramarine Blue mixed with Titanium White. These are also part of the dark shapes. Just those two colors made for a very close match to the actual shadow. It is easy to make snow shadows too grey. They are actually very clean and colorful. It is easy to lighten them later with reflected light from the sky.

Page 3: JEANNE MACKENZIE: Winter Landscape Plein Airdanielsmith.com/wp-content/uploads/MacKenzie_WinterWaterSol.pdf · 8 ) The distant cottonwood trees were painted with a thinner paint

4) Because the two large trees looked like salt and pepper shakers I changed the shape and placement of the second tree. I wanted to establish a focal point with only one dominant tree. To push it back, I painted it in a lower chromatic color. I added a small bit of the French Ultramarine Blue to my warm tree color to cool and recede the mid-ground trees.

5) I now added in more evergreen trees as well as roughed in the mass of the cottonwood trees in the background. The distant cottonwoods were a fairly neutral color but I wanted to enhance the ‘cool’ warm. I blocked in the lollipop shape of the trees with Burnt Sienna and then later added brush strokes of Burnt Sienna and Alizarin Crimson and Titanium White. This helped to give the feel that there was a bit of snow in the branches.

6) I started to give more form and volume to the secondary evergreens and added the start of the bush in the foreground. There was actually a willow bush that was out of the picture but I moved it over for balance and a design lead in. I mixed the Sap Green with a touch of Alizarin Crimson and Titanium White.

7) On the right I intentionally incorporated some shadow shapes that weren’t there. Compositionally it helped to direct the eye over to the main tree. The shadow blues on that second tree are also less chromatic than the shadow blue of the forward tree. A bit of the tree underpainting mixed in and knocked down the color. This helped to recede those back trees.

8 ) The distant cottonwood trees were painted with a thinner paint. I was then able to lay in the negative space ‘sky holes’ with thicker sky color (fat over lean) opening up the trees and giving them more personality. In the scene, the sky was very close in value and color to the snow shadows. I didn’t want the painting to about the sky, but about the trees and shadows. I wanted to make the snow pop and have more contrast so I intentionally muted my sky a bit. For the sky color I took the same snow shadow color and added more white and a touch of Cadmium Red. Afterwards I warmed up the sky a bit with just a few brush stokes of Alizarin Crimson and Titanium White. A little vibration is nice.

9) Time to continue adding my heavy sun filled snow. I did add a touch of red to warm the snow facing the sun. As the Titanium White was a bit stiffer than the other colors it was at this time that I dipped into the Painting Medium and ladled on the snow with the White. This is the fun part as you feel like you are frosting a cake, putting tactile texture onto a flat surface.

Page 4: JEANNE MACKENZIE: Winter Landscape Plein Airdanielsmith.com/wp-content/uploads/MacKenzie_WinterWaterSol.pdf · 8 ) The distant cottonwood trees were painted with a thinner paint

As I was finishing the painting I added some reflected light back into the shadow snow boughs. The bright snow reflects all sorts of wonderful color. Here it is fun to subtly add Viridian and the Quinacradone colors.

This painting took about 1½ hours. You want to not only document the scene at hand but to also to convey a sense of place and mood. A snow scene painting with evergreens can often be too black and white with not much color. It can ap-pear cold. What makes the painting so much more inviting is to add warmth (ie warmer cottonwoods and willow), en-hanced reflected light (shadow snow boughs) and warm sun kissed snow from a morning sunrise.

I was pleased to find that the DANIEL SMITH water soluble paints felt the same as my regular oils except the Titanium White seemed a bit stiffer. Here I used the Water Soluble Linseed Oil to loosen it up. Others may enjoy using the oil me-dium throughout the entire painting. Most of the time I painted with the paints either thinned with water or straight from my palette. In the heat of painting the artist often tends to forget the tools and materials as you concentrate on the values, edges, color temperatures and shapes. Even though I was using a different type of oil paint, I felt comfortable and found that the paints did lend themselves very well to my style of painting. I like using paints thin to thick ending with a fun bravado of brush work for the lights (rocks, snow, clouds…).

These water based oils worked well under all situations- even in colder temperatures and they cleaned up exceptionally well with just water. You didn’t have to worry about the toxicity of turp/mineral spirits. The paints also stayed supple through the entire painting (and after) and you didn’t have to worry about your brushes drying as with with acrylic and some water based oils.

The overall experience was great. I think these DANIEL SMITH Water Soluble Oils are something with which my stu-dents and I would like to travel.

Jeanne MacKenzieJeanne Mackenzie’s style of painting is a blend of impressionism and realism. Her paintings are done in oil with rich warm tones and a painterly application. These reflect the bold light and striking contrasts of her favorite still lifes and western landscapes.

Jeanne Mackenzie is a Colorado resident living in the Fort Collins area where she is one of the founding members of the Rocky Mountain Plein Air Painters. Graduating with a Bachelor of Fine Arts and Teaching Credential from San Diego State University she eventually fell in love with and devoted herself to oils. She has studied with Clyde Aspevig, Michael Lynch, Matt Smith and Calvin Liang. Her paintings are featured in several fine art galleries in Colorado, California and Arizona. http://jeannemackenzie.com/