
Photo Credit: Eric Jasper
Questions and comments are welcome.
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QUOTE FAVORITE
"The artist must actively
cultivate that state which most people avoid: the state of
being alone."
-James Baldwin, writer |
WORKSHOPS
FOR ARTISTS
Read Reviews from
workshop students
Hands-on classes for all levels
Individualized instruction emphasized
Click HERE for Details |
Jun 27 - Jul 1, 2011
Boone, NC
Powercolor Painting
5 day workshop
and materials discounts
1-800-227-2788
www.cheapjoes.com |
Jul 26 - 30, 2011
Burlington, VT
Vermont Art Event
workshops and
materials discounts
1-800-682-6686
www.holbeinhk.com |
Sep 19 - 23, 2011
La Pointe, WI
Powercolor Painting
5 day workshop
715-747-2054
www.madelineschool.com
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Oct 24 - 25, 2011
Palm Desert, CA
2 One Day Workshops
Expressive Painting +
Painting Water
with Oils or Acrylics
Venus Studio Art SupplyVenusStudios11@aol.com |
Oct 27 - 30, 2011
Pasadena, CA
Learning & Product Expo: Art
workshops + materials expo
www.learningproductexpo.com |
Nov 10 - 13, 2011
Raleigh, NC
Art of the Carolinas workshops + materials expo
1-800-734-6736
www.jerrysartevents.com |
Sept 10-13, 2012
Lac Du Flambeau, WI
Powercolor Painting
Oils and Acrylics
4 day workshop
715-588-3143
www.dillmans.com |
Contact Caroline if you'd like to discuss having her teach a workshop for your group.
Have a closer look at her workshop descriptions. |
| CHRISTMAS IN JULY |
| JEWELRY SALE |
50% OFF |
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Jewelry purchased on this website will arrive with a rebate check for half the amount paid.
FREE SHIPPING in USA
Sale ends July 31, 2011 |
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One of a kind designs Gemstones with
Pewter or Copper |

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COLOR CORNER
Color vs. Value:Color attracts your eye and prompts emotional response. It can also help to identify subject, interpret image, and impart overall mood or message. However, while color provides the entertainment, value does all the heavy work. Value is the essential impact factor. Value, more than color, imparts the illusion of spatial depth and form. Light and shadow differences (value contrast) define surface contours and imply volume. Our brains rely on dark/light data collected by our eyes in order to make sense of what is being seen. We see value first, color second. The absence of color in black and white photos does not confuse us, nor does the waning visibility of colors as sunlight daily fades to darkness. Value stays on the job when there is insufficient light to reflect color. In every painting's delicious recipe, value is cake itself. Color, is just the icing on top.
TIP for better skill in seeing values: Compare digital camera shots of both your reference and your painting. Accurate value representation is far more important than matching colors in the reference. If the painting is dark where needed and light where needed, it will carry the image visually. It matters less which colors are used.
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Caroline's books and DVDs contain many references, demos, and exercises pertaining to the importance of value in art. |
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Just off the easel...
See more works in Oil Painting Galleries
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"I have been living large on canvas lately and loving it. Way bigger than my usual canvas sizes, "Breathe" is the first to be finished among three relatively huge paintings underway in my studio.
Working at this enlarged scale is both liberating and daunting. Lots more paint, bigger brushes, bigger brush marks and broader strokes, often at full extension reach. Fun stuff!
This painting was inspired by a scene that halted me during a solitary early morning stroll. I think I stopped breathing for a moment as I walked close enough to catch the show of sunlight flashing down in multiple directions behind the trees. It's really a tribute to the location. Once a first rate golf course and one of my favorite places, the fairways are now sadly lost to housing development." -Caroline |
| "Breathe" 55 x 67 inches oil on canvas |
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