Traps in portrait painting based on photography

Traps in portrait painting based on photography

I’m often criticized because I explain how to paint a portrait from photography. Working from life is the only true religion, I always hear. I never answer because I know how things are in my profession. I say it again loud and clear: almost all my colleagues use photography when it comes to a commission. Only, they would rather keep silence in public. Anyway, I do not want to talk about that.

What’s one of the hazards of working from photography?

 

Traps in portrait painting based on photography
Portrait O Samuel, from life.

The exposure. The lefthand picture shows a portrait that I painted from life in my studio during our Tuesday sessions. I always take a picture of the model before we stop. That shot you see on the right. A major handicap in photography can be seen at a glance. The light-dark contrast is too big. In particular, the light parts suffer from the loss of the subtle nuances. I notice in my classes that many people overlook that phenomenon. So make sure that the print that you’re working from is not too light and that there is difference between the light and the high-lights.

Finally: of course work from life. Study as much as possible with a live model in front of you. The more training in direct perception the more your work from photography improves.

More posts on working from photography:

Work from photography.

Contact with the model.

More about photography.

 

More posts on painting from life model:

My favorite model.

Demonstration.

Power of perception.

 

Painting a portrait from life

Painting a portrait from life

Life model

Painting a portrait from life? Do you work a lot from photography? There is nothing wrong with that, I have said so often. It gives you the opportunity to calmly create a portrait with good likeness and time to mix the colours at ease. It is also often a fantastic picture that invites you to make a beautiful painting.

But there are also pitfalls, namely that you create a  too detailed  reproduction of the photo. That is a missed opportunity. A painting must be your interpretation and not a copied image. Continue reading “Painting a portrait from life”

Lingering thoughts when painting a portrait

portrait painting
“men at work”

These days I am reading the book “Man with a Blue Scarf” by Martin Gayford. It is on sitting for a portrait by Lucian Freud. Good books can take possession of your mind for days. It’s like when you spend some time in a boat and you are accustomed to the constant wobbling. Once on shore you find yourself still waddling. You must readjust. Yesterday and today I have been painting the portrait of the man in the picture above and the spirit of Lucian Freud is present at the sessions. His quotes are constantly itching in my mind.

Such as: “The longer you look at an object, the more abstract it becomes, and, ironically, the more real”.

Or: ” I paint people not because of what they are like, not exactly in spite of what they are like, but how they happen to be.

And “I would wish my portraits to be of the people, not like them. Not having a look of the sitter, being them”.

Time and again, I have to clear my mind because these lingering thoughts intervene. I must concentrate on my job, the sitter and me.