You are on page 1of 1

Art Lessons OIL PAINTING LESSONS Basset Hound Painting Lesson/a> Oil Painting Lessons

Basset Hound Painting


Oil Painting Art Instruction

"Melvin" the Hound, Part 2 of 2


The level of detail in this work is
Art Lessons
calculated. I’m trying to strike a
balance between a counterfeit Free Art Tutorials
reality and outright insanity. I want
Drawing
to suggest the texture of the sunlit
arm of the couch without Watercolor
descending into painting every
Art Books
thread. Despite how it may
appear, there isn’t as much fussy Oil Painting
detail here as there seems. I’ve
applied mixes of every color used Pastel
to date in the couch to stroke in a
Acrylic
few cords of texture, tapering off
as the arm recedes. I used a wet- Charcoal
on-wet technique to avoid an
overworked look. Learn to Draw

Pen and Ink


I am especially pleased with how
the texture of the canvas I am
painting on came through the thin ArtGraphica
layer of paint to enhance the
Blog
texture of material. Use what
you've got! Shop

I will revisit the background at Church of Bones


intervals, but that portion of the
Contact
painting is basically finished.
Art for Sale
It is now time to start painting
Melvin, the focus of this painting.
This is where the painting will
succeed or fail. First, I lay in the
basics of the left side of his face
using asphaltum, burnt & raw
sienna, some Naples yellow, and
a titanium/zinc white mix. There
are traces of burnt umber, a color
I don’t really care for, and lamp
black.

This primitive stage is often


discouraging.

I block in the ear, tighten up the eye, and I smash in the tones of his big snout. Things begin to shape up with these
details, and I am happier with the results.

I have given some definintion to the muzzle, focused the eye more, and did some work on his flabby lips.

This side of his face has become acceptable for now. The other side of his head, the focal side must now be
considered.

I complete the other side of his face and the critical focal point eye. The shadow side of his face will have to come
down in value, and the bright whiskers on the right side of his nose will also go in later, although I have already
fussed in some of his eyebrow whiskers above the left eye already.

Note: You can see in the detail on the right how thin my paint is kept.

The “eyes” have it.

In portraiture, yes, even animals, the essence of a successful capture radiates from the eyes. I toyed with the idea
of having this hound look at the viewer, but decided against it. Instead, I went with that aloof, King of the Kennel
look.

The eye is truly a fascinating object to paint. The clarity, luminosity and light-refracting wetness of the orb are all
qualities I wanted to achieve. On the left you see a detail of the photo, and on the right is my interpretation of the
eye in the painting.

With both the head and expression captured I’m into the final stretch. I began to paint in the mass of his chest,
varying my colors with bits of almost everything used so far.

I refine the fur some more, and lay in the basics of his big fat foot. You can also see here how I’ve fussed some
more with his muzzle, adding tones to suggest the rows of his whiskers. I have also defined the dimension of his
floppy ears more. I added a stronger core shadow on the right-hand ear, brightened the highlight on the right side of
that dark and added hue, a burnt sienna, in the dark-side to the left of the core shadow.

Below is a detail where you can better see the range of colors in white fur of Melvin's chest.

I worked out the second forefoot


and the basic ripples of his flab, in
and out of shadow. I won’t be
worried about evening out the
tones at this point. I’ll be able to
balance them when I put down
the next (and final!) layer of
paint/glaze.

(That's the last little patch of bare


canvas as well!)

Here’s the progress to date. I've completed all of the brown tones on his back.

I’ve painted in the rest of the “white”, as well as his hind-ham. Here I chose to use more green to harmonize the
right hand-tones with the value on the left. Still requires adjusting, but nearly there!

(The canvas is completely covered now, except for the tip of his waggy tail!)

This detail more clearly shows the transition of the various changes in light. Up until now I have not really touched
on one of the ultimate bugaboos in painting: edges. In most compositions you’ll want to strike a balance between
hard and soft edges. The harder the edge, the more your eye is attracted. Softening the boundaries of areas outside
your center of interest will make that center work harder for you. Fur by nature is soft. You can better see here the
use I’ve made of green on his hind leg. To create the illusion of fur I simply extended the darks from the core-
shadow well in the light. This was allowed to dry, and I then went over with a stiff mixture of white and stroked in the
fur. I then darkened the tones beneath that leg, then rubbed in some reflected light on the under-side of the limb.

The waggy tail tip is now complete.

From the beginning, I wanted his right eye and the sunlit whiskers to be my focal point. Of the whiskers, I isolated
the one that was critical to me, and that was the one curved whisker. Holding my breath, I got it right with my first
stroke. I used a Liquin-ified mixture of titanium white and a 4/0 brush. The other whiskers, not too many, were easy
to add.

This is it! I harmonized some more colors. I have darkened his back, the under-side of his hind-leg to bring his one
visible hind-paw into sharper relief. I also darkened his front, the left-paw in shadow, belly, side, left-ear, and all the
body creases; nearly everything!

This completes the painting.

It was odd for me to condense over a month of time into these few pages, but I hope you can find one or two things
of value.

As I said in the beginning, this process is very adaptable and forgiving. I encourage you to try and adopt some (or
all) of it in your own work.

Thanks for staying with me.

Back to Part One

By Dave Dowbyhuz

FREE ART LESSONS


WATERCOLOUR WATERCOLOR WATERCOLOR
Horse Utah River Leopard

OIL PAINTS OIL PAINTS ART BOOK


Portrait William Whittaker Freehand Art

2 0 StumbleUpon 0 Blogger 1 WordPress 0

© ArtGraphica

You might also like