Knowing The Fundamentals Of Los Angeles Painting Classes

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Tamara Gold created mixed media art in our painting class.  Los Angeles painting classes are great for people who genuinely wish to develop their painting skills. These kinds of classes provide different kinds and forms of painting like oil painting, watercolor painting as well as abstract painting.

Los Angeles painting classes are conveniently located in the vicinity of the place. They provide classes for kids and older people and students obtain personalized training in a group setting. Beginner, intermediate and advanced students are also accommodated.

Painting programs are available to children as an art education as it's been proven that it helps them to boost intellectual growth, encourage perseverance and control, improve confidence and creativeness, and hone communication and problem-solving skills. There are basics of paintings that you have to recognize as part of the lessons' introduction. To precisely express your emotions concerning the subject you are painting, you should understand these fundamentals of painting such as sketching, color, value and composition. Below items present you with knowledge of these fundamentals in oil painting classes.

1) Drawing - Understanding how to draw is among the most useful skills a beginner oil artist could have. Many new artists normally frown on the very thought of sketching first. They might instead dive into painting, as nearly all newcomers do. Absolutely nothing is more fulfilling for a painter, than dealing with color. Nonetheless, if you wish to get experience working with values, form and space, then sketching is a thing you must think of grasping. You should at the very least have a basic understanding of drawing methods before starting.

2) Color and Value - Color is just about the one most exciting part of oil painting. It is certainly remarkable how an artist can take a two dimensional surface that will create the impression of depth and length using color. To properly depict a 3 dimensional scene utilizing color requires a lot of exercise as well as an understanding of concept and how to blend colors. The basics of color are its value, hue, saturation and temperature. The value of a color is how bright or dark it is on a range from white to black. The color represents the color itself as it appears on the array of colors. The saturation is the intensity or purity of the shade. The temperature of a shade is how cool or warm a color is. Artists could use temperature to provide the false impression of distance. Cooler colors tend to recede into the distance, as in a distant mountain range, and warmer shades have a tendency to progress closer in the direction of the facade of a photograph. Color concept is an extremely broad subject, the one that warrants better interest.

3) Composition- Have you ever went to an art gallery and a specific painting simply got your attention and drew you in? A thing in that piece of art appeals to you and makes you remain there looking and examining it. One element the artist has utilized successfully in that artwork is in fact composition. The artist has organized the shapes and has separated the area in the piece of art in such a way that attracted your sensory faculties.

In Los Angeles painting classes, there isn't any reason why a novice should not begin with oil paints, it's actually a difficult medium to perfect. It could mix up and frighten beginners but it is correct, nobody's born with a paint brush in their hands, everyone learned from nothing at certain phase.

Inside the Painter's Studio-review by Rene de Loffre

Renelog53web
Mixed media on canvas by Rene de Loffre

I wanted to share with you this very interesting review by Rene de Loffre

A wag once said, “Inspiration is the act of drawing the chair up to
the writing table.”  Such an enlightened utterance might just as well
apply to the artist Joe Fig’s recent book, “Inside the Painter’s
Studio”
.  Perhaps it was to discover whether inspiration was indeed
hard work that Fig devoted himself to visiting the studios of fifty
plus artists (most in the New York area) since 2002.  After all, could
there be any better way to learn the secrets behind visual creativity
than conducting voyeuristic visits of established artists? 

Visiting artists’ studios as a project is not new.  A good example of such an
endeavor can be seen in the 2004 book, “Inside the Studio,” the result
of a large compilation of studio visits to over 200 artists by the
Independent Curators International (ICI) that began in 1981.  Three of
the artists in Fig’s book -- Gregory Amenoff, Chuck Close and Fred
Tomaselli-- also appear in the ICI book.  Yet another recent
publication, “The Studio Reader--on the Space of Artists” from the
School of the Art Institute of Chicago has also picked up the gauntlet
on this subject. But each of these books has a different focus. Fig is
interested in the nuts and bolts of the studio life, ICI wants to know
each artist’s mental, emotional and historical thoughts, and the Art
Institute of Chicago is a collection of various topics on the studio
from the standpoint of artists as well as art historians, critics, and
curators.

To make the visit more than just a pass-through, Fig constructed a
small model of each studio visited; some even include a figure of the
artist at work. As he states, it was a continuation of a study he
undertook  “…on artistic process and the myth of the sacred studio
space…” Each model is meticulously constructed to the point that one
is often fooled into believing that the picture of the studio model
seen in the book is an actual photograph of the studio.

For Fig, it all started when he paid a visit to the studio of the
second-generation abstract expressionist Michael Goldberg in the same
studio space once used by Mark Rothko. It was a pivotal experience for
Fig who greatly regretted that he had failed to record his visit.  He
vowed that this would never happen again. Fig prepared his future
studio visits as if he were undertaking an expedition.  He established
no fewer than eighteen questions that he would ask each artist during
his visits. The questions have the artist reader in mind; providing a
quick fix for any self-imposed solitary confinement artists who don’t
get around to other artist’s studios.

The questions are generally quite specific such as, when do the
artists wake up and when do they actually start working? What do they
wear? Do they listen to music or the radio? How many paintings do they
work on at one time? What specific paint brands does the artist use?
How often do they clean their studios? How do they organize their
space and worktable? The last two questions, also rather specifi
were whether they had a motto or creed that they lived by and what
advice would they give to an artist just starting out.

The answers to these questions offer much insight. Most of the artists
have separate studios of adequate space and is not where they live.
Most of the artists, no surprise here, listen to music or the radio;
in fact four of them listen to NPR. Slightly more artists work on more
than one canvas at a time.

At least eight of the artists use Williamsburg paints, a highly
pigment-rich paint. And what fun to learn that the artist Inka
Essenhigh’s favorite color is one that I personally hold sacred in my
own paint box, Williamsburg’s Green Gold. The next most popular paint
(used by five artists) was Old Holland, another pigment-rich paint.

Probably the greatest insight was that, with the exception of two
artists, they go to work in the morning, work the entire day and
sometimes into the evening. In fact, four of the artists worked seven
days a week.  However, the two late risers, (like myself) Dana Schutz
and Amy Sillman, still ended up putting in just as many hours as all
of the early birds.  Because all the artists in the book are
represented by a gallery or two and have to meet show deadlines, it’s
not surprising to find them putting in long hours in their studios.

Most of the studios were meticulously or adequately neat and clean.
Only five studios fit into a messy category. Was it a coincidence that
our two night owls, Schutz and Sillman, were among these? Sillman said
to Fig, “…Because you were coming, I tidied up.” Schutz, on the other
hand, told him that, “…I feel bad when people come in because they
always get paint on themselves…”

The last two questions provide the reader much insight, none more than
for the working artist, if only as a reality check to live by in their
own studio.

GREGORY AMENOFF – “…I believe in the fraternity and sorority of
artists supporting each other and creating opportunities for each
other…don’t wait around for the dealers and the curators to come to
you.”

ROSS BLECHNER – “The ones that are going to persist are the ones who
are going to be artists, even if they are much less talented.”

CHUCK CLOSE – “Inspiration is for amateurs-the rest of us just show up
and get to work.”

ERIC FISCHL – “The art world senses where there is a hot spot…”
“…members of a peer group help each other; one gets a gallery, they
tell the gallery, ‘Oh, you got to check out so-and-so’s work’.”

JANE HAMMOND – “…If you keep yourself interested, you’re gonna keep
everyone else interested. Too many people are too lazy about that, I
think. I want it to continually change and unfold and surprise me
too.”

BILL JENSEN – “Artists made the idea of what heaven and hell looked
like. We have the same kind of job today.”

RYAN McGINNESS – “…to not worry about being an artist or trying to
make art, just kind of make whatever you have to make, and then build
a life around that.”

MALCOLM MORLEY – “…there’s no such thing as a ‘professional artist’.
There’s an artist who’s turned his endeavor into a vocation…”

STEVE MUMFORD – “…to be truthful to themselves. I think the worst
thing for an artist to do--ever--is to paint what they think other
people want them to paint or what the market wants them to paint.”

MATTHEW RITCHIE – “Quality control is really what you’re doing. You
know, you are looking at it, you are checking it out. Then you’re
going “Naa, not good enough…It needs x or y.”

JAMES SIENA – “Artists who emerge from the world of the unknowns into
the world of the known generally are first very well known among other
artists…so support your peers, don’t go knocking on William de
Kooning’s back door…He’s busy!”

JOAN SNYDER – “Just be in your studio and work and not be worried
about the art world.”

At the end of the book, Joe Fig interviews himself and gives this
advice  “…always be working.  You can’t just sit there staring at the
walls waiting for inspiration.  Creative thoughts come while you are
creating…”

Love this last quote, that is the message I needed to hear and my favorite acrylic colors are:
Burnt Umber and Quinacridone/Nickel Azo Gold by Golden.