Steve Fleming

Artist Studio

Steve Fleming

Tag: water

“Light Dances Lively”

My friend Caroline gave me a wonderful photo of a river in Western Maryland and I painted several pieces from the one image.  This painting is focused on using scraped and saved whites on the birch trees to direct the viewer into the darker places in the painting.  I tried to use really loose brushwork to capture the jumpy movement of the water as it ran across the river rock.  This painting is all about movement.  The poem is sort of a hybrid of a Haibun, two Tanka poems with a piece of prose in the middle.  Enjoy

In The Studio: Two watercolor demonstrations, same image

This week I used the same image for my watercolor classes and ended up with 2 similar but distinctly different finished paintings.  I give myself about 30-45 minutes to present the lesson and to do the completed painted.  Interesting this is the same amount of time I give for my oil demonstrations but if the

“Rappahanock River”

In my Friday oil class I painted this painting for them. The focus of the piece is the warm afternoon light on the water and trees, and although I wanted the entire painting to be interesting I wanted to keep the concept simple. I think I accomplished that although I wish I was handling the edges better but time will work that out. Rapphanock River11x14 oil on canvas panel “Rappahannock River”

“Out of Seward”

I worked on this painting of the coastline out of the harbor in Seward, Alaska and I am still not very happy with it. I think I will try to glaze some warm tones over top of it to get some glow on the rocks. Having never done that I am not sure how it will go but I think without trying I will never have that experience. If it works out I will repost it. I found this to be a lot of fun to paint and I am happy with the background hills and the water but the cliffs in the foreground are just not working. Oh well, I have a bunch more I am working on, so hopefully when they are finished I will like them a little more.DSC_0020

“Beautiful Light”

I painted this piece yesterday at one of those rare moments when I had total clarity of thought about the subject and its meaning to me.  The center of interest is the beautiful piece of light on the water and the sky hooks down to it.  I didn’t want the rest of the painting, a metaphor for the rest of the world to obscure the visual impact of the light skip sitting perfectly on the water.

Demonstration: “Tranquility, Reflections”

In this Demonstration we will be working on created a nice peaceful painting that is emphasizing the simplicity of calm water reflections. Drawing the boats will be fairly easy if you remember to keep them flat and in perspective with a low horizon. Here goes have a nice time with this it should air out all of your brushwork practice.15 x 22 watercolor paper cold pressed drawing with a 4B pencilwet the paper completely and let the water set up for a few minutes and try to angle the paper higher at the top than the bottom so the water will run down toward the bottom. This will keep it from pooling in the middle of the paper. Run a couple passes of Raw Sienna paint horizontally in the sky followed by a couple horizontal passes of Cobalt and Cerulean Blue. Pull some of the blue into the water under the boats.Using a round brush a size 12 works for me pull some Cobalt Blue at the horizon line indicating a loose feeling of distant land then drop in some Raw Sienna. Don’t rub these colors or they will turn a nasty grey you want the colors to stay separate. Pull a little Raw Sienna into the foreground water.Staying with the number 12 round brush and painting with the side of the brush not the point start up in the trees with a mixture of Sap Green, Raw Sienna, Burnt Sienna and Ultramarine Blue begin to get a nice rough textural passage of trees make sure you are leaving openings in the trees. This involves the trees and the sky and makes the trees look real. A point I need to make here is that when I say use the colors I am not brushing them together in a big pool of mushy colors I am adding colors to the mixture and letting the added colors have a voice or show up on the paper. Using the side of the brush get a wash of Raw Sienna with a hint of Sap Green onto the rocks. Leave lights on the rocks and remember to cut around the top edges of the boats.Still using the round brush I add a mixture of Alizirin Crimson and Burnt Sienna to the rocks creating shadow forms and I leave some Raw Sienna showing for the light. I really clean up the edge of the boats not cutting them out of the background.detail of the rocks and the cutting around of the boats, notice the texture at the bottom edge of the rocks it looks like water moving, the darker pieces on the rocks is the Alizirin, Burnt Sienna mixture with some Ultramarine Blue added to get a rich dark. I drop that in while everything is still damp so the edges will stay lively.I repeat all of the colors from above with a series of very fluid brush marks to create the feeling of gentle movement in the water. Notice that I am not trying to exactly repeat the objects that are being reflected I am just getting the impression of the objects. Don’t be afraid to use lots of color and bold brushwork. leave lights and leave the color of the sky. I then used a Raw Sienna mixture with some of the left over Alizirin mixture to paint the warmer sides of the boats and dropped in a little Cobalt Blue on the transom of the left boat. I used a cool grey, Ultramarine Blue and Burnt Sienna, mixture to indicate the shadow forms inside the boats and dropped few dark accents into these to make them more vibrant.Add in some dark lines and a few dark dots and dashes and the painting is finished. I used a number 6 liner brush to make the fine detail marks in the water and in the trees above. Use a lot of restraint when doing details nothing ruins a painting quicker than over doing the details. Enjoy painting this it will test your brushwork and application of paint skills.