Look! Tova Niovi, it’s a work of art by the artist Tamar Levi.
Look! Painting by Tamar Levi, it’s Tova Niovi, a work of art by me.
[Photo by http://www.irishaidau.photography/]
Look! Tova Niovi, it’s a work of art by the artist Tamar Levi.
Look! Painting by Tamar Levi, it’s Tova Niovi, a work of art by me.
[Photo by http://www.irishaidau.photography/]
I must remember the kind words during the long months of making art in isolation. Otherwise, the critical thinking takes over.
“Finally I found what I’ve been looking for all this time in Brussels. This painting is my gift to myself to remember a 20 year career here.” ~ Karin
“It was the most exciting outing I have had!! I loved hearing the stories behind the paintings. But most of all I was happy to finally see you after following your journey of your art through social media. My friend [name] is an art lover and was so thrilled that I invited her. Looking forward to receiving the link to the prints. [Name] and I were already discussing where I would put them in my house…”
Some of the visitor’s book got illustrated with lots of love for my paintings and even a suspicious looking “dolphin.”
Meet up groups left very positive reviews online
“Beautiful, Tamar you’re a real artist.”
“Thanks for the immense Naxos joy that you’ve provided for my birthday and beyond! Looking forward to more amazing art from you!!”
“Wow! I don’t know how you do it all…”
“It was quite an emotional experience.”
Some comments were sketches: portraits by little artists… of me!
Some of these comments were shared in the gallery, some online and some illustrated in the gallery’s visitor book by the youngest art appreciators yet.
“[T]he painting is You! whats been sold was just a small part of your beautiful heart that will simply regenerate and create more love. like a beautiful vine tree.” ~Vicky Anastasiou
“…it’s amazing, your very best art work! Keep going! Really enchanted from these journeys you took me…”
“The paintings have a thrilling effect. I felt goosebumps myself, and then goosebumps again, standing next to the art collector who was getting goosebumps herself. I could feel the visceral connection she had with the painting.” ~ Viktoryia
“…it was magical to feel that part of me and life”
“…[A]n enchanting journey… full of emotions and positive vibrations…”
“Wonderful,” ~Stella Gadona
“Thanks to you for finding that inspiration…”
“I love how much joy it brings and the colour palette you use is so filled with sun and warmth,” ~ Cherine
“Tamar Levi’s exhibition is absolutely awesome and unique!! I enjoyed it!!!” ~Nadia
So many lovely page mentions and shares too, e.g. comedian extraordinaire Lila Stambouloglou:
Some comments were from faraway. They continue to remind me that friendship love and support knows no boundaries.
Gallery visitors whispered things that will keep me motivated to paint more.
“This one makes me feel very deeply,” ~Agita
There’s even a surprise in the visitor’s book. A page illustrated with great talent by another artist, (sadly left unsigned). A portrait of me which appears to appreciate more than my art.
My art profiled on Belgian TV channel BRUZZ by master of the documentary art Anja Strelec.
My favourite part is how she caught my funky hair waving in the wind like a bug’s antennae!
Production: BRUZZ TV
Directed and filmed: Anja Strelec
I’m both delighted and sad my painting of the bluebell forest at Hallerbos was sold.
Being an artist is a labour of love and I went into labour after doing the initial sketches for this exact painting four years ago!
Technically it took all the years of my child’s life to complete the artistic vision I had that day in the forest.
And Tova Niovi just looked at this photo & said: “You had long hair when I was born and I had short hair then and now you have short hair and I have long hair; I could be YOUR mummy now.”
That’s not how time works, sweetie. But who am I to speak: I measure it in paintings. . .
“Hallerbos, Belgium” from the IMMENSITIES collection on show at Art Base until Oct 10th. Art Base, 29 rue des Sables Zandstraat, 1000 Bruxelles
Here are some of the lovely things people said about the art yesterday that warmed my heart, or made me smile and will keep me motivated to keep making art for you:
“YES! YES! YES! That is EXACTLY how that place FEELS!”
“I can feel the sun on the back of my neck when I look at this one.”
“Could I buy a print of this one that is already sold? Even though it’s not the original painting, the feeling I get is always authentic.”
“There’s something mystical in your use of light.”
“I feel like I could take many different walks in many different directions through these landscapes.”
“This view is where my partner proposed just a few weeks ago!”
“I like that you used unexpected colours.”
“Wonderful paintings – so vibrant, alive and full of feeling!”
“I didn’t expect to see Greece and Belgium with these colours.”
“Your prices are really accessible, thank you. I couldn’t afford original art otherwise.”
“There’s something in the atmosphere of light between the trees that reminds me of the person I’ve started dating and falling in love with right now.”
“Very happy to be here.”
“Amazing work.”
“I’ve been on a pedalo in that lake! You should’ve painted me in a boat right there!”
“Thank you for these so personal colorful landscapes.”
“Thank you for this trip into the happiness of art!”
“These paintings are both feminine and masculine.”
“Painting on the frames is really unique and exciting.”
“I love all the tree ones. I’m a trees guy.”
“You saw lots of colours in this place, you see a lot of the colours because you’re an artist, but I just see an excellent place for me to ride my motorcycle and have one of my greatest rides.”
“I would arrange them in my home in this way…”
“I need to bring back my wife before I buy because she is the boss.”
“I need to bring back my husband before I buy to check he enjoys it too.”
“I need to bring back my child tomorrow so you can inspire them the way you inspired me.”
The exhibition is on until November 2020.
IMMENSITIES Art Show: Art Base, 29 rue des Sables Zandstraat, 1000 Bruxelles
IMMENSITIES Solo Art Show: Art Base, 29 rue des Sables Zandstraat, 1000 Bruxelles
My mind boggles seeing the culmination of my lifetime painting right here in hard print in one of Europe’s top national newspapers.
I’m trying to be happy and not to worry about the changing nature of arts and culture events during these strange times and the thought this might be my last art show if things change even more.
It’s been a real struggle to get this art show through the pandemic and available to culture lovers.
My next scheduled one was postponed again and the one after that postponed indefinitely…
So tonight might be my first event in a while and my last one for a long, long while.
I’m just letting tonight be what it’s going to be and I hope to see you there!
IMMENSITIES Solo Art Show: Art Base, 29 rue des Sables Zandstraat, 1000 Bruxelles
Turning Outwards
The large size of the canvas is significant. It offers you more space for your inner life.
There is a proclivity to turn inward when there is a global pandemic, but I want these paintings to remind the viewer of the spiritual release we receive when engaging with wide views of majestic nature.
The orientation is not just physical, it’s a psychological direction too. These are landscapes that inspire the sublime.
Kant’s philosophy of aesthetics involves the idea that a small human form as audience to a vast largeness will give us a sublime experience of nature. This is an almost spiritual release, like the gasp when you see a brilliant view.
Until recently I illustrated children’s books with big ideas, such as philosophy and theoretical mathematics, these were big in another sense. The title of this collection, Immensities, speaks to the broad horizons in these paintings, but it is also the far reaches of your mind. The Immensity of how your soul expands when you stand on these cliff tops or at the heart of these lush forests.
Choosing the Correct Outlook
Of course, one must choose angles of certain landscapes that first offer that sense of space. Only then a good initial sketch on location can provide the best possible opening of the shapes to make one feel the freedom of that sense of place. Travel memories and sketchbooks are brought back to the studio. In this case, my studio was my home during lockdown.
Optical Illusion
When you look at visual culture online you don’t think about the scale. Scale matters. If it encompasses you in real life, if it is bigger than real life, you enter the scene more deeply. You are smaller than the canvas. You are a child. In that way, your childlike wonder is more instantly stimulated.
I noticed the big ones made me afraid. Am I afraid to take up space? Am I afraid of bigger, more visible mistakes? Whatever the case, the larger canvases were necessary to achieve the goal: a nearly fish-eye lens viewpoint expressed on larger canvases is designed to provide a sense of perspective. These vistas are an offering for expansion, travel opportunities not lost, but to be found, again and again.
Different Directions
There are different walks you can take into these landscapes. In my last continuous line illustrated series I “took a line for a walk,” and in this one your eye can take a journey down different paths.
Although I visited these landscapes with my sketchbook in freer times, I painted this whole series, ironically, under the world’s first lockdown. It is the first time in the history of civilisation that all recreational activities were cancelled and we were prohibited to travel. As a family we were respecting the safety precautions and so it was with a sense of grief that I became an artist in residence in my own home and my art expressed the wider world. I painted with love the wild bluebells of Hallerbos forest during the time of year that those bluebells bloom. I recalled our joy in discovering that cool and shadowy woods with its bright points of violet where the bluebells carpeted the clearing and I painted it knowing I could not visit this year. So it was with a sense of longing and grief that I travelled those landscapes again in my heart and in my art, but they are intended as a gift to the flat walls of collector’s homes, deeply shapely and opening and widening the views you might or might not have from your windows, and allowing another scene to open up another view for you.
Painting Positivity
I hope the shapes appear spontaneous at first glance and give a gasping sense of space but then, if you’d like to look closer you might notice a thoughtful layering of light and carefully composed colours that builds up a sense of positivity and imbues warmth.
I was surprised: a North European art collector came to view the works of Belgium but ended up buying a very specific painting of Greece. It made me realise that although living between Greece and Belgium is my journey, the boundaries are not so present in this collection. There is a deeply personal journey of my encounter with these two nations’ presence in nature, as an aesthetic experience. However, they were explored in a shared global pandemic and so in each canvas there is the shared need for passing through a gateway, whether it be painted, or over the frame, or beyond the water, and onwards into an expanding space in front of us. This movement towards positive change is intentional: I hope you can sense the optimism I’m trying to plaster on our walls. This is my political act: to counter the negativity of the news with the colourful movement across canvases intended for regular positive uplift of your mood at home.
This collection will be exhibited in a solo show titled IMMENSITIES at Art Base gallery from the 24th of September 2020.
Now, thanks to this global pandemic, now we know having a view is nearly essential. We finally understand that if we do not have picture windows, then landscape art can open up our small rooms and turn house arrest into a home sanctuary.
These works were painting from memory during lockdown. They are my response to the feeling of being in closed quarters: painting widening vistas across the canvas.
What techniques did I choose to create a sense of more space?
Click on the links below for more description.
Landscapes that make more space in your head & home.
Colour mixing & texture to encourage dynamic eye movement.
Painting on the frame to create sculptural depth.
This collection will be exhibited in a solo show titled IMMENSITIES at Art Base gallery from the 24th of September 2020.
“I’m serious. I would love to have you make a painting or drawing inspired by current COVID-19 family life…”
14 May 2020 – Day 70 of our family’s Covid19 Lockdown in Belgium I wrote on Facebook:
“Out of curiosity, I timed and averaged across the interruptions yesterday. On average, during the moments when I explicitly told her I would be doing something other than engaging with her (e.g. working/cooking/going to the bathroom) my nearly 4 year old interrupted me every 15 seconds. For those of you who don’t understand what it’s like to be in lockdown in an apartment with no garden, with no childcare support, with a young child, imagine your thought process being interrupted on average every 15 seconds between 6.30 am and 8pm every day for 70 days. It’s INTENSE, people.”
Many, many people messaged me publicly and privately with solidarity but one message was bit different.
Mark Carlson wrote:
“Tamar, can you paint this feeling on canvas?”
“Uninterrupted?”
“I think the interruptions would be part of the art. Or maybe the interruptions are the art. Can I commission a painting about this from you?”
“If you don’t mind the painting taking 900 years to complete [smiley face emoji].”
“Sounds like you already have a working title for the work [winky face emoji].”
“Haha! SOLD to the patient man in the front row.”
Then he sends me a private message:
“I’m serious. I would love to have you make a painting or drawing inspired by current Covid 19 family life. No rush and no expectations on my part. I think your talents are pretty cool.”
“Oh my goodness! I thought you were joking. I’d be delighted to do this project. Thank you. Will have to brainstorm how to depict all the big feelings. Thank you!”
“I really like your work and would love a way to remember this experience in life… I would like to hang something on the wall. You have the liberty to choose what it is. Thanks!”
“This is an amazing opportunity to be creative. I’m excited and inspired to do something that relates specifically to this era. I’ve started brainstorming ideas.”
“Please choose the size and materials that fit your inspiration. I will worry about finding a place to hang it. This moment in time is so rich in emotions. I am happy to are inspired.”
“Thank you so much for this opportunity, and for your faith in my abilities.”
21 May 2020:
At first glance this illustrated painting could be mistaken for a landscape, or a city park view. In fact, the subject is more precise. The neighbours. The pandemic allowed us to meet the neighbors. Can you see them on the balcony? People we’ve never spoken to before, cheering with us every night for the medical workers during the corona virus global pandemic, then shouting <<À demain!>> “See you tomorrow!”
I titled the painting <<À Demain!>>
As I was painting on our little balcony, cautious of the way the sun moved around the buildings and whipped the shadows out and around the other balconies I thought about how this art collector allows me to stay true to my creative inspiration, and yet is telling his own story about what he wants to see in a work. He trusts me to execute it well, he knows my interpretation might be akin to his own, as he’s known me for a few years and has a pretty strong grasp on my values through observation. At core he’s telling me all that matters to him is the creative documentation of a never before experienced, now globally shared event. I guess you could then conclude that we have collaborated on this project, through years of knowing each other as neighbours, this mutual knowledge, the trust, the creative skill set and the creative commission… yes, a unique collaboration befitting a public display of gratitude, as in the painting.
With Mark’s encouragement, I painted from our balcony, immortalizing a unique moment we shared: Every night my husband and child and I join the neighbours in a public display of unifying gratitude. See what looks like a trumpet in the turret? Someone in the turret next to them plays what I think is a trumpet, or maybe a French horn. He was always just inside the window, so the external image is from my imagination. He’s only learning and it certainly doesn’t sound perfect, but it brings tears to my eyes to hear that almost-salute. It’s the intention that counts. This painting is really about something unique to our experience of the pandemic; a public practice of gratitude, every night in our neighborhood.
The first time it happened I was holding my child in one arm, waving with the other, my husband shouting <<À demain!>> and I knew I’d never forget how unique that moment was, shared with intimacy with unknown neighbours made known by our shared experience.
I invited Mark to come see the work unfold as I painted it, standing beneath our balcony. I painted en plein air, attempting with all my might to get it all in one go, to commemorate the theme of a singular moment in time. This watercolour and mixed media painting is not as belabored as acrylic works because Mark asked me to include family life in the theme. There is no way I could have gotten through so many layers of colour and mixed media if I had even attempted oil paints. So, it’s the urgency in completion that brings the dynamism of the watercolour and mixed media to this canvas. I hope the unrestricted movement of the oil pastels, for example, can be seen by the viewer to bring a sense of immediacy to the image.
“No restrictions, whatever you want, just documenting this time.”
I was a little frightened that whatever may be my vision may not suit Mark’s aesthetic taste, but more than that, I felt deeply, truly honoured by the trust he put in me and incredibly impressed. For this is how this person, this art collector, demonstrates his creativity: with a truly original brief that pinpoints an era in time.
We spoke on the phone before I delivered it by hand.
Mark said, “Throughout history artists painted historical moments, I am yet to
see art based on this historical event.”
I realized more than just creativity, there is a journalistic element here. As a professional video journalist, he’s expressing and exploring his own high level career through another high level medium; documenting historical events through this creative art commission.
The finished piece is the largest watercolour I’ve ever done.
A couple of details about the work: I have been primarily a portrait painter for many years, and portraits are about a likeness, capturing the essence of a person no matter the angle. In contrast, whenever I create a landscape I work hard to make it at an angle that is always accessible. The audience is invited to step inside. My landscapes create another room, an extension in your home. You look through your wall to another world that welcomes you.
We are the viewers, from our balcony. I do not comment on the tight quarters of our apartment. Or the length of time we’ve been indoors. I don’t comment on the very few vehicles left on this busy street. Or the empty sky that normally buzzes with airplanes from Brussels airport and helicopters covering EU summits. This scene is quiet. To people who know this park, this neighbourhood, like Mark and his wife Anita, they could tell you that’s part of the era I’m capturing here: a quiet street that is not normally a quiet street at all is a statement in itself. It’s a subtle statement. It’s one for people in the know.
I know that they enjoy our neighbourhood park as much as we do and I hoped that by immortalizing the tree-lined avenue they commute through every day it would be a painting they could carry with them through life, taking the park and the light and life it brings wherever they go.
I hope it’s clear, even though this pandemic has instigated truly tragic deaths and insolvency, my current work is still trying to share a positive and bright approach. It’s not gloomy or apocalyptic or expressing the frustrating circumstances around these strange pandemic times. Instead I’m expressing the way we connected with our unknown neighbours every early spring evening with light, bright colours and a dynamic movement in the brush strokes as the wind passes through the deserted park trees.
There’s a slight sense of grief in the way I depict our neighbourhood park from a distance. It’s not available to us now, only expressed to those familiar with it’s form, those who might spot that I excluded the park gates, any opening to the inside of the park, in this particular image. You’re welcome to enter the painting but we were not welcome to play in our park during the pandemic. If reading between the lines, that’s the only slight sadness on the canvas. The park play was literally policed and so the inner park was not alive to us. Here we are on the periphery. The periphery of the park and leaning over our balconies to applaud with others at their periphery too. The split-second depicted here is joy, the joy of meeting people from where we live, connecting to where they live and greeting them evening after evening. Even though the trumpet may not be in tune, it was still stirring. This piece may not be illustrating the sensitivities of loss or pushing abstract boundaries as Shock Art, but the positivity I try to portray is actually deeply, stubbornly and even politically reactionary. I encouraged Mark and Anita, to frame it with something bright like goldenrod yellow. It’s the sunlight on the leaves and the joy in this landscape that is reactionary to the anxiety portrayed in the current newscape. It may be Mark’s job to tell us the current news in images, but it’s my job to help you sit with them for years to come.
8 June 2020:
“It’s everything we could have wished and more!” ~ Anita Holten Carlson
“Unbelievable. The level of detail is amazing. This painting really invites you to walk right into it.” ~ Mark Carlson
“Thank you Mark! It was a very exciting project.”
When Mark sent this image of the work in a temporary frame I was really shocked how much more detailed it looks from a distance. While painting on our tiny little balcony I forgot to step into the house, to stand back from it while I was painting, to see how much detail carried up from ground level to the audience at a distance. I hope it does the same for the viewer, carrying vibrant details up to the viewer remembering this unique era at a safe distance in the future.
Everyone loves time lapse images, right? Here are some before and after photos, just for you. A smattering of art theory in between, but feel free to scroll through and just enjoy the pretty pictures.
This is the first painting in a collection called IMMENSITIES.
My first step with this painting was visiting and sketching the locations that inspired an entire 20 canvas landscape series. Hallerbos is a huge forest in Belgium. When I was little I was under the impression that bluebells are special because they only grow in the wild. Hallerbos has big wide promenade paths because bluebell colonies take a long time to establish and when crushed can take years to recover. The location of the forest (“bos”) is in Halle, which is mostly in the Flemish Brabant with a little part in Walloon Brabant. It makes Belgian people agree on one thing, which is unusual. Our whole local community, the Flemish, the Walloons and the expat bubble, all equally love the annual display of bluebells at Hallerbos, and there’s a lot of excitement every year when people start asking each other “Are the bluebells out yet? Don’t miss them!”
There are certain places, and certain people, that make me ache to paint them. I feel like even if you lost everything I’ve ever painted, those would represent the essential points of light in my life.
This collection is different from my previous art work because I normally do continuous line portraits and the only landscapes I’ve ever made before were miniatures. The “opening up” giant shapes I intended for this collection, were originally inspired by real out-of-this-world landscapes witnessed as I travelled across Greece. Just the Peloponnese alone has lava sand beaches and slate stone towers on dry mountains and lush vineyards and white sand beaches with ancient temples. One day across one coast is like visiting 7 different country’s landscapes all in one gulp. There are so many dramatic shapes in Greek landscapes, often with a cliff precipice involved. I carry that awareness of the movement of the earth with me now travelling through Belgium. To talk Art Theory of a minute (if not here, then where?), I try to actualise a Kantian understanding of the Sublime in my landscapes: the human-sized relationship to the greater-than-human sized “reveal” of the nature scene. This relates to the title of my art collection, IMMENSITIES, because immense spaces were the starting point and the sublime reaction was the intention behind the work. In Kant’s aesthetics, the sublime (distinct from the beautiful) occurs “when we confront a reality that exceeds our conceptual faculties,” (Martel 45). To be more precise, we experience the sublime when our mind is confronted with reason, which forces the mind to conceptualise the object (the world), but fails to conceptualise because the world is too enormous and overwhelming to be represented as a whole (24). In neurotheology, the part of our brain that experiences awe shuts down our sense of personal circumference. The individual literally lets go to experience the greater whole without ego. A combination of dynamic paint brush strokes mimic hot air shafts, which provides the movement that leads us into the sense of space. The use of paint on the frame should lean us into the depth of the space and lend itself to the enveloping of the enormous scene.
Over the last few years I’ve prepared for these paintings by workshopping unusual real-world shapes, especially landscape shapes in my sketchbooks, with pen and ink and watercolours too.
I spent about a month mixing my own bespoke colour palette for this series. Acrylic paints only because I have a family now and oil paint brush cleaners are toxic. I knew I wanted an Andy Dixon-style use of oil pastel to bring in illustrative details, but I wasn’t sure how I would achieve this on a more textured layering of paint than the flat surface he normally utilises.
It was very difficult to settle on which colours I would use throughout this whole collection. I knew I had to go with essentials rather than nice-to-have colours. I kept having to pull myself back from what are pleasant mixes and return again and again to the mixing board to find what are the essential mixes for me. For example, what is True Red for nobody but me. I found that the only indubitable red, for me, on a gut level is a very orangey red. A glossy red reminiscent of Kazimir Malevich, in my case.
Next step: me overthinking more things, of course. I worried about the cost of framing for the average art collector. There are often three stages of payment for a piece of art: purchase, shipment and framing. I get it. That’s a lot. Someone commissions a painting, pays half up front, or buys one already made and then has to pay for shipping AND framing. Sometimes that takes the art far out of their original budget, or extends the spending process that takes the joy out of the acquisition. So, with full empathy for the person who wants to own art, (and support living artists!), without breaking the bank, I came up with the idea to use beautiful antique frames, with their own original sculptural elements to inspire the shapes in the final artwork (rather than the other way around) and provide the new art owner an easier solution to the cost of framing. This should cut the cost of owning an artwork down by at least a third, and even down by two thirds if they don’t need shipment either.
Belgium has an incredibly rich antique collecting culture. There are regular antique markets, popular antique shops and international annual fairs too. I was enrapt when first visiting the “Old Market,” Jeu de Balle, in the Marolles district of Brussels. One of the most famous weekend antique markets, it was a living museum. Handling Delftware, Bavarian mugs, French asparagus plates, even original silver Art Nouveau period antiques, I realised there was a distinct diversity here: Belgium sits between the Netherlands, Germany and France. Of course the antique markets will reflect that crossroad! Then, most brilliantly, Art Nouveau was born in Belgium, in the middle of all that, of course. Sourcing the antique frames for this series was an exciting, educational hunt. I learnt a lot about history through the objects we treasure. (Even bought an antique that we traced to a friend’s grandparent’s honeymoon!)
A lot of sanding and cleaning and priming went into prepping these frames. I had to hold a vision for the final image, for each of the paintings, already in mind all the way back then, while choosing the size of the frame and the background tone for that canvas. Holding 20 visions for 20 paintings while working for over a year, while being interrupted by family every day. It’s a challenge.
I prepared preliminary sketches with a rough placing of the final images so I could visualise them even better. Then measured the gallery walls to check I had everything lined up correctly. Then bought new canvases to fill those frames.
By that time the holiday season was upon us, so I brought my studio work right into our living room. No, we do not have the extra space. Yes, I did get a little help from the mini artist.
I painted them multiple times to get a richness of tone for even that very fundamental base layer. With different colours layering on top of each other, only barely visible through thin patches, there’s a sense that emotions are bubbling under the surface.
I had intended to only work on largescale Greek landscapes but the curator at Art Base gallery suggested that I prepare works based on my travels through Belgium too, because as he put it, “That has been my personal journey, as a visual artist.”
After months of discussions with Art Base gallery over solo show scheduling, doing 40 other continuous line paintings for another solo art show at the EU Parliament, framing a different collection for another auction, and the final confirmation of the next artshow dates, I finally, FINALLY, got that sweet and scary deadline to work towards, and could focus on these antique-frame-painted paintings with the knowledge they had a host gallery waiting for them, somewhere truly special where they could come alive in the world.
The next stage was to think long and hard about the different points of light inside The Blue Forest (Hallerbos) and choose the part that felt like the heart of the place, to me. This was done from memory. Then to plot the best version of that on the canvas. Shaping the way you move toward it on the path through the trees, I wanted the forest to bend like a fisheye lens to the big reveal of the bluebell carpet that is blooming on the near horizon. This meant that I even had to have the light source and the fallen puddles of light already in mind before layering up all the foreground details.
When paint brushes finally hit the canvas, the first global lockdown in the history of civilization had just begun. Painting landscapes in lockdown felt like grief. It hurt to think of all the beautiful places we had travelled and the great outdoors. Nature felt inaccessible at the time of painting. Memories could be my only reference.
It was at this point that I came to the title for the whole collection. IMMENSITIES just fit. I think a lot about the theory and the philosophy behind the art, and I think a lot about the largess I want to convey. The sense that with this painting you have a new window in your home. The idea that you could walk into it and get a lungful of fresh air. I needed a word that reflected both the big ideas behind the pieces and the big views inside them too.
Where did the word come from? While painting I was listening to an audio recording of Howard’s End by EM Forster. It had been 20 years since I’d read the book and unlike most books, it ripened with age and was well worth the reread. Elizabeth Klett’s free Librivox’s recording is exceptional. The locations in the book are both intimate and immense. I listened while I painted as the characters were also listening, me to them and them to Beethoven. EM Forster was excited to describe Beethoven’s Fifth. He suggests that even if we lost everything else Beethoven had ever written:
If we lost everything he wrote except what is in this key, we should still have the essential Beethoven, the Beethoven tragic, the Beethoven so excited at the approach of something enormous that he can only just interpret and subdue it. It would be a pity to lose a Beethoven unbuttoned, a Beethoven yodelling, but this musician excited by immensities is unique in the annals of any art. No one has ever been so thrilled by things so huge, for the vast masses of doom crush the rest of us before we can hope to measure them. Fate knocks at our door; but before the final tap can sound, the flimsy door flies into pieces, and we never learn the sublime rhythm of destruction.
Howard’s End, page 120
Excited by immensities. That’s me. That’s exactly the work I’m doing here.
I’ll admit it. I always panic halfway through every painting. I call it the Midway Blues. It’s no longer the promise and potential of the start, nor the pleasure of completion at the end. I also wonder whether the final vision will be achieved and if the work in progress is not already beautiful enough… I’m taking a chance, a leap of wobbly faith, that my skills will be able to carry the vision all the way through the painting process to an objective audience’s satisfactory completion. I doubt myself. I often weep. It’s a frustrating moment. Just like Forster describes Beethoven’s music, the Fifth in particular, as the place of a “thrilling” conflict between the composer and “something enormous,” “immense,” “the sublime rhythm of destruction,” I needed to fully digest the vastness of the scene and with my own painting rhythm, layer it up and over itself, with layered paint upon paint, getting over myself in the process.
The thing that drove me through the halfway point on this Hallerbos painting was the knowledge that the bluebell forest is more shady than at that point in the painting process. It had more depth. It needed a lot more shade. Only then would the magnificence of the blue bells pop on the canvas, as they do in real life. If the real life shade of the woods had not been essential, to my commitment to the real place, I could have just left the canvas at the midway point. It was pretty enough. But pretty enough doesn’t cut it, in my book.
I layered on the shadowy bits, the crinkly bits, the leaves, the bluebells themselves. And finished it. Got it as close to my original vision as humanly possible, then varnished it. The painting was ready to visit the photographer’s studio. On the first day of the newly relaxed quarantine measures I put on a mask and gloves and drove to the studio of the incredible photographer Iris Haidau. I’m trying to get better at keeping a record of these works before they go live in your house!
Here is the final painting. I love it so much and can’t wait to share it with you, in person, at the artshow in September. I know when you see it in real life you’ll fall deep inside it and want this extra room in your home as seen through this handpainted window.
If you buy it here or at the show, I’d be delighted this painting found a happy home. That said, if nobody buys it, I honestly don’t care. It was so successful. I wouldn’t mind having this horizon in my own home from here on out.
A quick video, just a minute from my speech at the European Parliament’s Feminist Forum with reactions & testimonies from viewers.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uNNAnRnvRpI
Below you can find the text from the short video and credit to all the people involved.
Tamar Levi – Artist:
You know who these women are!
Somebody cooked your meals
Somebody wiped your bottom
Somebody cleaned your house
Everyone on these walls is someone who has worked for others
They may not be famous
They may not be familiar
But they should be celebrated.
They are the invisible labour made visible.
The style that I apply is the continuous line style I don’t lift my brush off the paper I don’t lift my pen off the paper I work in one continuous line Some journalists have called it The Single Line Method.
To me it’s about continuity.
I want to dedicate this entire collection
To my grandmother
She passed away this week…
She taught me to fight for other women
And fight for my education…
Sandra Pereira – GUENGL MEP – PCP – Portugal:
We would like to thank Tamar Levi for this exhibition.
It was really a very good idea. And it was a great contribution to the event. The event became richer because of the pictures, because of her explanation of the images. It was really really good to have you here. Thank you so much.
Ewa Espling – Politician – Activist – Sweden – Vänsterpartist:
It was absolutely the exhibition I wanted to see! And the theme of the exhibition about us women Together, and how we depend on each other It was incredibly beautiful. Went straight into my heart. Thank you!
Tamar Levi – Artist:
This is Women’s Day 2020 & “20/20” in English means “Clear Vision” So for you here today These are 20 visionary women For Women’s Day 2020 Thank you!
Video: Vasileios Katsardis/Olivier Hansen
Les Femmes et La Revolution Event Organiser: Charlotte Balavoine
Curator: Green Door Gallery
Artwork: Brush & Acrylic Black Ink, Watercolour Paper
Portrait References: Sarah Levi, Grandmother, Teacher, Union Representative Dalia Aviv Levi, Sister, Aunt Grace Ketty Cardon, School Founder & Director Bhushavali Natarajan, Parent, Friend, Eco-Fashion designer & Heritage Travel Blogger Vaia Vaena and Christina, Friend, Parent, Lawyer Linguist & The Future Meghan Sinnott, Lifelong Friend Elena Kountoura, Member of European Parliament, Parent, Former Minister of Tourism, Model & Athlete Christina Abood, Mother, Friend, Mirth-maker, Lawyer Joana Xhemali, Feminist Killjoy & Stop Gap Child Care Provider Athanasia Katsigianni Sandra Hodzic, Friend, Parent, Journalist Naomi Lee Gal Gal Porat, Cousin, Friend Dr. Vanessa Katsardi, Sister-in-Law & Professor of Engineering Aneta Safaryn, Friend & Home Keeping Support Helen O’Sullivan-Tyrrell, Artist, Friend, Curator Ahu Yigit, Parent, Friend & Photographer Margaret Joyce Sweet, First Time Great-Grandmother, Women’s Land Army (WWII) & Timber Corps Anna Giannopappa and Chryssa, “Koumbara” (Best Woman in Greek Tradition), Parent, Friend Athanasia Delistamati, Evgenia Delistamati & Tova Niovi Levi Katsardi, Cousins Reading “Goodnight Stories for Rebel Girls” Dr. Bona Selimaj, Paediatric Doctor, Parent, Friend Giannoula Katsigianni, Great-Grandmother, Resistance Member, Business Enterprise Founder Eliza Sfyra, Dancer, Book Lover, Engineer, Godmother Michele Lalić, Parent, Friend, Nonprofit Professional Nina Lucija Lalić and John Larimer, The Future & Her Grandfather Beata Szypcio, Friend, Parent, House Keeper Support Silvia Anna Ratzersdorfer, Friend, Co-Author, Art Historian Sofia Sereti, Child Care Provider, Friend Mathilde Borcard, Therapist, Trauma Activist, Body Worker, Community Builder Athanasia Katsigianni, Grandmother, Mother-in-Law, Business Director Konstandinka Kouneva, Friend, Parent, Former MEP, Union Leader, Disabilities Activist Solly Elstein, Fairy Godmother, Fairy Goddaughter, Linguist, Global Citizen Sarah Ironside, Be Kind, Be Happy Eleana Ziakou, Friend, Parent, Literary Translator Efthimia Eleftheria Fotou, Friend, Child Care Support, Policy Maker
Panel Speakers:
Ewa Espling, Politician, Activist, Sweden, Vänsterpartist Sandra Pereira, Eurodeputee, Portugal, Coordinatrice FEMM pour GUE-NGL Sira Rego, Eurodeputee espagne, Vice-presidente de la GUE-NGL Saliha Boussedra, Docteure en philosophie d l’universite de Strasbourg Francoise De Smedt, deputee Bruxelloise, membre de la commission femmes du PTB Jule Goikoetxea, Professeure a l’Universite du Pays-Basque Pernando Barrena, eurodepute du Pays-Basque Pierrette Pape, directrice d’Isala, coordinatrice de #GenerationAbolition, Belgique Maite Lonne, survivante, autrice, militante, Belgique Pascale Rouges, survivante, militante, Belgique Marie Merklinger, survivante, militante, Allemagne Anne Darbes, survivante, autrice de “Le Visage de l’Autre,” France Malin Bjork, eurodeputee, Suede Anne Mejias De Haro, Juriste, syndicaliste CGT Carine Rosteleur, infirmiere, secretaire regionale CGSP sur le mouvement des “Blouses Blancs” Belgique Alba de Vincente Barbero: greve generale en Espagne le 8 mars. Oihana Etxebarrieta, membre du Parlement autonome basque Notopoulou Aikaterini SYRIZA, deputee, region de Thessalonique Irini Agathopoulou Member of Parliament, SYRIZA Concert Manou Gallo- la reine de l’Afro Groove
Manolis Glezos (Μανώλης Γλέζος) is a living legend. Our grandmother calls him “The True Patriot.” He was very kind to let me paint him. I considered it a good opportunity for me to try following a classical method of painting. It’s like following a new recipe to make a very familiar cake. Warning: this article is meticulous as it aims to be informative. The process I followed is based on old masters’ materials and a step-by-step process based on research by Joseph Sheppard, Jeanette Aristedes and Jacques Maroger. Only after finishing this project did I read about how Sheppard and Maroger’s research has been discredited with modern science. For example, Maroger claims Van Eyck used egg tempura as varnish but microscopic studies have now shown he used a pine resin. This helps me understand that both Sheppard and Maroger were sharing their best estimates as to what the masters used and providing illustrations that would assist a pupil towards a similar result rather than applying identical materials. Note: all books and materials are listed in the bibliography and shopping list below. I’ve also added a mini glossary at the end for art students learning key terms. Full disclosure: secret ingredients included.
I moved toBrussels just in time for an exhibition on Rubens and tried to get in for free by arguing that, like his models, I too am Rubenesque. Intrigued by his alla prima theatrics and self-identifying with his prolific output I thought I might as well try his technique. I assumed that setting up a studio on the shoulders of giants would ease the long road of trial and error I normally follow. Problem was, I’d spent most of my early career working with pen and ink for black and white illustrations as well as felt-tip markers for coloured ones, rarely dabbling in oils. So I had to brush up on my oil painting skills here at mid-career stage and gather new materials here in a new country.
Attempting to emulate an old master’s technique while living in a country with limited delivery options and where you don’t speak the language triples the difficulty of starting a new style. You must do your homework; research the artist and their technique. Then do more homework; translate all art material key terms into native vocab. Then do more homework; source the addresses of quality art material stores and get your head around how to get there between unmarked streets and random opening hours. Then do the footwork and practice the local language en situ. The whole process is like training to be a hunter-gatherer spy. If you don’t have the studio all set up by your slaves/apprentices like the old masters did, then, like me, you’d better have plenty of old fashioned self-discipline and stubbornness.
Peter Paul Rubens (1577-1640) was known for his versatile, rapid work and enormous output. Unusually for his time, he painted a range of subjects. He worked on unusually huge canvases. He received unusually huge commissions. He was certainly no starving artist. Rubens combined diplomatic missions with art tours around Europe, studying in Italy and influencing many. He practiced by copying other master artists to improve his skill and developed techniques, e.g. he applied Titian’s layered (velaturas) soft edges (sfumato) to an alla prima style: in other words, painting without an under painting in gray tones to guide you.
Rubens searched for and found a technique for combining Flemish technical brilliance with the broad Italian style and invented a medium that helped put a gloss on his paintings, leaving them not as matte as Italian work of the day. Rubens’s work is now considered the epitome of baroque style.
My personal, autodidactic colour system begins with a visual assessment of the lightest and darkest points and builds up the middle tones from between those two extremes. While researching this project I read Juliette Aristedes’ book “Classical Painting Atelier” and now know that was a starting technique advocated by Leonardo Da Vinci.
My colour work always concludes with an emphasis on the ivory black and titanium white, leaving my highlights and darker shadow accents unblended to give the canvas a fresh and unlaboured look. After reading Joseph Sheppard’s book “How to Paint Like the Old Masters” I learned this was also the concluding technique of Frans Hals.
Often intoxicated by the texture and mystery in Rembrandt van Rijn‘s work, I added some of his impasto technique as icing on the cake. So, keeping with the recipe metaphor, although I aimed for pure Rubens, you could say, I’ve added a pinch of Da Vinci, Hals and Rembrandt to taste.
My subject is not one that an old master might have chosen. Here is an image of him sketching me as I sketched him. Although I am using materials comparable to Ruben’s, I have not tried to copy his works or composition.
My original model, Manolis Glezos, is a remarkable man and a Greek national hero. In the resistance against fascism, Glezos first came to fame by tearing the Nazi flag down from the Acropolis with his bare hands. Then, having survived a WWII prison camp, he continued to fight the good fight, working in the Red Cross. At the time I painted him, my model was 93 years young, worked long hours in the European Parliament campaigning tirelessly against, you guessed it, fascism and oppression. And unlike many others his age, Glezos still has ambitious dreams. For example, he is building a library in his home village of Apiranthos on the island of Naxos.
A friend recently sent us a gift and he was on the stamp!
I normally paint portraits only from life, but knowing these first steps in a new medium would be very slow, and my model a very busy man, I prepared figure drawings and sussed out composition considerations in advance. Rubens did this too, so that he was not burdened by the model’s comfort and could concentrate solely on applying the paint. It is always very difficult to find the exact likeness that I want to immortalise. In this case I can blame the model: he makes many strong facial expressions. Even at this early stage I had to make serious decisions regarding the message of the final piece. Did I want to show the face he makes when he reveals his eagle-eyed reactionary past, or the face he makes when being the articulate and active man of the present? Or should I share the hopeful face he turns on when looking towards the future? In the end I made a finished drawing on buff paper with black charcoal, red chalk and white conte. I used red tints of warm colour and white for highlights and light areas. The colour of the paper serves for halftones and reflected lights. The direction of the line follows the form* and are always in accordance with gravity.** If my landlady is reading this, please note: I then placed a sheet on the floor and covered all surfaces with protective fabric.
Rubens preferred a white panel painting surface, streaked with a thin warm umber tone instead of canvas because the panel freely read more light. Rubens liked these striations because they would show through large semi-transparent shadow areas, breaking up reflected light and making the whole passage vibrate. The warm tone is dried and nonabsorbent before painting started, so that the tone would not be dissolved into subsequent layers of paint.
For this portrait I used a canvas panel. Sheppard says well-seasoned Masonite or wood is even better, but it was difficult for me to source in our timescale.
This is how to prepare the surface:
1. Using a large brush, apply a coat of warm liquid glue size on each side of the panel and allow the glue to dry. Coating both sides prevents warping. Glue stops the wood from soaking up the gesso and requiring more layers.
2. Give your panel three or four coats of acrylic gesso*** on each side, sanding after each coat. Keep the gesso lukewarm in a double boiler if you have one. Dampen each dry coat of gesso before you add the next coat. Apply gesso on both sides of the board to prevent warping, using a large flat brush, moving my brush in a different direction for each coat. The coats are at right angles to each other.
3. To isolate the gesso from your paint, brush on a final coat of warm rabbit skin glue that is one part glue to 30 parts water. You can tint the glue with a water-based colour such as a watercolour, acrylic or even poster colour. Paint on the tinted glue with a wide brush. Leave the striations of the brush visible if you like (this is the Rubens’s technique), since they break up the reflected light and show through the transparent shadow.
4. Once dry, if you have used hardboard, sand paper lightly then repeated gesso application in both sides. Sand again and gesso again.
5. Tint a 50-50 mixture of acrylic matte medium and water with burnt umber-powdered pigment, acrylic or watercolour. (I aim to experiment with a yellow undercoat in future paintings to keep closer to my personal style.) Apply with a large brush, leaving the brush striations on the panel. Leave to dry. When the surface is BONE DRY it is ready for painting.
Now, I made a mistake here as this is the first time I’ve done a full painting following the techniques of the Old Master. I mixed far too much burnt umber into the matte medium and it came out too dark on the canvas. So I had to start a new canvas. I’m being careful with these steps here. I wanted to get this just right. Plus, I figure, if I do it right then I’ll know the depth of mixtures better next time and it will become second nature to mix them to the right consistency.
Like Rembrandt, I first sketched the portrait on the panel with a thin wash of colour- as liquid as a watercolour wash- using a warm umber tone to indicate shadow areas. Rubens used a brown tone, but my style is to heighten, lighten and brighten, so I applied a lush umber. This renders the shadow areas warm. I hope to move towards an ochre tone at this stage in future paintings in order to keep it on the lighter end of the spectrum for a brown underpainting.
One problem encountered at this stage was that while I lay in the portrait on the panel with a bristle brush and a small amount of medium tinted with burnt umber, I found the bristle brush to be too thick to pull together the sitter’s features at the size desired. I tried to give careful attention to transcribing proportion and composition and most importantly: retaining a striking likeness, but my size 4 brush was just too large for this 16 x 12 inch (40.6 x 30.5 cm) canvas. In order to fit the subject’s face and shoulders into the frame of the canvas I realised I’d need a smaller brush. Unfortunately, my smaller brushes are all fine hair rather than bristle. A bristle brush is needed at this stage to pick up and hold this gloopy textured matte medium. To overcome this issue I had to forsake the bristle brush for a charcoal pencil just to get the facial details on the canvas.
I went back to the size 4 bristle brush for the large spaces and clothing. Only an outline indicates the light areas.
Using the same brush as above, I scrubbed in the hair with burnt sienna diluted with a small amount of medium. Note the same amount of medium should be blended into each colour mixture, but the amount of medium should be very small. One obvious sign of too much is when the surface becomes slippery.
Here I painted in some of the foreground frame, using a combination of ivory black, white, and ultramarine blue. Keeping my paint thin, I mixed the colours directly on the panel and worked them into each other.
I painted in the dark parts with dark umber. I kept these shadow area transparent, however, so that the light of the canvas panel shines through. (Later I worried that this kept my work grounded in the illustration style and I now wonder whether layer upon layer with no base visible allows one to “ascend” to the appearance of a proper oil painting.) I mixed a gray from ivory black and white and paint in the shadow areas of the face, neck and chest, keeping the paint thin and translucent. I also painted in the gray wherever form turns and recedes, such as on the cheek and chest. A separate bristle brush is used for each colour.
Then a translucent middle tone is laid over the light area and acts as a flesh tone. I chose to mix a variety of colours for my model’s flesh tone. All of my exhibited, commissioned and private practice pieces have begun on blindingly white backgrounds with unblended Cadmium yellow used to block in forms. Sheppard suggests using yellow ochre, white and French vermillion to make the mid tone for the flesh. Although I am now working with materials and techniques that are comparable to those produced by the apprentices and studios of the old masters I still want to retain my personal style and vision, so I put more yellow in flesh tones than an old master would. You could think of the extra yellow as postmodern, inspired by the Impressionist’s extreme colour palate. Or, more humorously, you could think of my yellow as post-postmodern, influenced by decades of The Simpsons. Whatever flesh tone ensues, this should be applied so that it overlaps all the edges, leaving none of the bare board showing.
Going back to honouring Rubens’ method, colour is only added to cheeks and lips. I then brushed in additional touches of the vermillion into the areas that have a pink tone: eyelids, cheeks, nose and mouth. Note the light and shadow areas are almost the same value- except that one is transparent and the other translucent: modelled together until the form is correct. Like Rubens, I emphasised powerful contrasts between transparent and opaque colours. Drawing into the existing wet paint with burnt umber, I sharpened the drawing of the head and features. I blended the colours into each other with a large, dry bristle brush, working first in one direction, then in the opposite. I only wanted to soften the colours, not change the existing shapes. I then improved upon the drawing of the portrait, restating and correcting with each of the basic values—flesh tone, gray, and burnt umber—using a separate brush for each colour. I painted in reflections under the nose and chin with vermilion. I used cool grays, simply mixing black and white; applying them between the lightest parts and the darkest shadows. The grays are used everywhere, on the dark and light sides of the forms, always applied as shadows. Rubens also used these grays to make forms recede. Since stronger colours appear to come forward, the grays seem to fall back. As Sheppard puts it: if there was a “secret” to Rubenesque colour combinations, it certainly must have been his cool grays. When used next to the pink flesh tones, these grays take on a blue or even green hue.
For highlights I mixed a lighter flesh tone of white and yellow ochre. Working with this lighter tone—quite heavy and opaque because of the texture of the white lead paint—I then marked in the highlights, careful not to add too much light to the skin tone. Remember that many artists argue no pure white is visible in the living subject. In keeping with my photographic training, I modify this tradition with the knowledge that I will use pure white only for the catchlight in the eye. According to early photographers, the catchlight represents the human soul. Without it, in my opinion, any subject appears dead.
Using separate bristle brushes for each colour, I modelled the head more finely. I worked the brushes back and forth from light to shadow with each stroke. I modelled the form together much like the alla prima painting of Rubens, working one tone back into another, correcting each form.
I now reinstated highlights, soften edges and paint final details. I also marked in the deep accents if the nostril and the line between the lips. As I always tell my pupils: the line between the lips must be the darkest line on the mouth. Outlining the mouth with the same tone line as the parting is a sure sign of unprofessional observation or dark lip liner worn by the model in reality.
Once the gray was modelled into the form, reflected lights were painted into the transparent shadows with reds or grays. The highlights are not pure white but have some flesh colour in them.
Just like Rembrandt who constantly worked on contrasting his heavy opaque lights against his transparent medium-laden shadows, and his warm tones against his cool ones, I blended only after the paint had dried a bit, once it had already become tacky and difficult to move which is one of the textural qualities peculiar to the Rembrandt technique.
At this point Shepphard says I should cement it with a transparent mixture of burnt umber and ivory black, but I was too frightened to apply a layer with such a dark element as black, even if it’s nearly transparent. I was afraid it would appear smoky. Instead, I painted in the background with mixture of white, ivory black, ultramarine blue, and a little medium. I wanted to apply the details of a typical Rubenesque landscape, but with the acropolis in the background to link to the legacy of Glezos, however at the last minute I chose to leave his face as the focus. In theory, if the colour was too dark or too light it can be corrected by adding more colour directly to the panel and then working it in with a brush until the tone is right. However, due to my fears over darkening the image, this step was not necessary in this case. The edges of the figure are overlapped by the blue, so there is no hard line. If anything is lost in overlapping, the form can be restated with dark paint. In this method is important to fill shapes with colour and not have hard lines or bare spaces between the background and the figure. The soft edges- the sfumato– give a feeling of air and space round the subject.
Now the two final stages: application of first the light and then the shadow accents. According to research on Rubens, the light tones are heavy and opaque; the highlights on flesh should never be white alone, but always mixed with some flesh tone. Bringing my own style into play, based on my background in black and white photography and dark room printing, the white catchlight in the eye must hold the whitest unadulterated white on the page and the darkest crevice must be the solid black tone. Even if glossy with medium (or on glossy paper, holding the photography reference), the white catchlight in the eye must be the polar opposite end of the spectrum from the pre-selected darkest line in the image.****
Rubens would mark shadow accents with dark burnt umber, crimson or black. The paint was then softened or given further accent where needed. I used a gray made of solely black and white to draw the highlights of the jacket and then use the black alone for the dark accents of the folds. I painted in the shirt with a mixed blue and pure white, not pressing hard on my brush to produce a dynamic line. After a long sitting, when the paint would no longer move, I let the canvas dry. With all that medium it took a very long time to dry.
Here is a timelapse video of the making of this painting:
You can see it go from a glaze to a gaze to Glezos.
A Rubenesque technique required more courage than that of other painters because of the unfinished appearance of each stage. Only at the end does the painting pull together.
Rubens worked alla prima, but, at the end of this project I decided I wanted a bit of Rembrandt mystique in there. Rubens is known for his voluptuous young women who require reams of busomy soft skin, which my model certainly does not have. The skin of my model is more suited to Rembrandt’s techniques at this stage of the painting. Beginning a second sitting after a couple of weeks of waiting for the painting to dry, I followed Rembrandt in glazing the entire painting with medium. However, I don’t follow van Rijn blindly. For me it was a tint of yellow, for Rembrandt it would have been a tint of black or umber. This immerses the entire subject in shadow for his purposes, in light for mine. I figure, how else to make a martyr of the Left glow?
Like Rembrandt, I then took a cloth and carefully wiped out the light areas. Some of the glaze remained in the crevices of the heavy impasto and made them seem even more three-dimensional. I emulated Rembrandt, painting into this dark glaze, continuing for many more sessions. The end result was as intended: a damn good likeness and a soft, nostalgic effect with heavy (for my style) layers emerging into the light.
This painting awaits exhibition.
Footnotes:
* Many thanks to my father for teaching me dynamic lines that follow form.** Many thanks to Evgeny Baranov for impressing upon me the importance of using gravity to guide your hand in skilled drawing.*** Obviously, Rubens never used modern gesso. Without his resources and for my purposes, acrylic gesso is the best substitute for his.**** Many thanks to Paul Ubl, who taught me how to measure my blacks as true black when I was twelve years old and he was teaching at the University of Anchorage Alaska.
Art Terms:
Alla prima- Direct painting without under painting, with the painting completed in one sitting. (Note, although Rubens was able to do this all in one sitting, I don’t have a maid or cook so I had to take breaks for Real Life.)
Cool grays- In this context I am referring to cornflower blue tones mixed with black and white. Warm grays tend to have lavender red tones mixed with black and white.
Drybrush painting- The technique of using a brush containing very little or no paint to blend or stipple paint that has been applied previously.
Form- In this context I am referring to the concept that the form is all the visible features represented in an artwork.
Gesso- A mixture of glue, water and whiting (or precipitated chalk) used for priming a painting surface.
Glaze- A transparent coat of paint thy enables a dry undercoat to show from underneath as through coloured glass.
Medium- To paint with oils means to paint with colour pigments binded by a drying oil. Some people use linseed oil, walnut oil or acrylic mediums. More discussion on mediums can be found below.
Impasto- Heavily applied opaque paint that usually shows the marks of a brush, palette knife or other tool for applying paint.
Modelling together- In this context I refer to when we create the illusion of volume on a two-dimensional surface, providing depth by shading.
Powdered pigments- Pure colour ground to a powder ready for mixing with a painting vehicle such as oil of water.
Sfumato- From the Italian word for smoked; a term used for soft, smoke like edges.
Translucent- allowing light to pass through but not details or very clear shapes. Translucent also means semi-transparent.
Transparent- allowing light to pass through so you can clearly see details and shapes.
Value- This is a common art term that means the lightness or darkness in a colour. For example, white is the lightest value, and black is the darkest.
Shop:
I hunted through plenty of obscure places online until I found an art store called Schleipper here in Brussels. I now know there is also a shop called Creacorner that might stock many of these items.
Shopping list:
Halftone buff paper for preliminary drawingBlack charcoalRed chalkWhite contePaint sheet or tarpaulin to protect working surfaces1/4″ untempered Masonite or well-seasoned wood or marine plywoodAcrylic gessoWarm liquid glue sizeWarm rabbit skin/jellied glueSandpaperA large flat brush for the gessoWashed (colourless) Linseed oilWhite lead (flake white)Naples yellowYellow ochre (light)French vermilion (light)Alizarin crimsonBurnt siennaBurnt umberIvory blackUltramarine blue or Prussian blueBrush numbers 4, 5, 6 and 8 round bristles, number 4 round sables, and largeflat bristle blenders and 1/2″ flat oxhair blenders.Whatever you use to clean brushes, e.g. White Spirit. Burnt umber powdered pigment, acrylic or watercolour for under coat. (I will experiment with the yellow undercoat and report back.)Acrylic matte medium OR thick jelly-like basic medium (Sheppard details Rubens homemade version on page 14. If, like me, you don’t have formula cooking equipment and feel squeamish using white lead pigment then buy one of the ready made mediums)
Recommended mediums:
Roberson’s Medium for Oil Painting.Taubes Copal Painting MediumWinsor & Newton Alkyd Mediums (an oil-modified synthetic resin).Sheppard cites a company called Mayer and claims this is a 19th century British formula of oil, resin and wax. Medium Flamand and Medium Venetian. Manufactured by the aptly named French firm Le Franc and Bourgeois.Sheppard even suggests using thin asbestos pads over low flames, which certainly dates his book to before asbestos was determined evil poisonous.
Note: there is no master medium. Rubens constantly changed his medium.
References:
Aristides, Juliette“Classical Painting Atelier: A Contemporary Guide to Traditional
Studio Practice,” Watson-Guptill (2008).
Maroger, Jacques“The Secret Forumlas and Techniques of the Masters,” The Studio
Publications (1948).
Rubens exhibitionhttps://www.fine-arts-museum.be/en/exhibitions/from-floris-to-rubens
Sheppard, Joseph“How to Paint Like the Old Masters,” Watson-Guptill (1983).
Timelapse video on the making of this paintinghttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VckHHfVnHoY
Website on Rubenshttp://www.peterpaulrubens.org/
Contact: contact@tamarlevi.com