Nina – 12-10-23

in hive-185836 •  11 months ago 

nina-12-10-23-(2023)-(1024-x-761).jpg

Click here to see this oil painting on my website.
Click here to download a printable of this artwork.

First Oil

This oil painting ‘Nina – 13-10-23’ follows a prestudy I made last August. As stated before, she is a great model with a gorgeous body. I feel honored to draw and paint her. This is the first oil I made of her and I hope you like it. If you like both the painting and the model you can visit her page on deviantart. Perhaps you will even recognize some motifs I used for my drawings in the recent past.

Enter the World of Color

Abovemeant prestudy I rendered in a style one can typify as a hotchpotch of cubism, roundism and solarisation. Worth mentioning is the challenge every artist faces to come up with something coherent in every new painting. An idea can be processed into graphite very easy, at least that’s my experience. Putting it into oil sometimes proves to be a tall order. Enter the realm of color. It’s a world in which relations between colors are never fixed or form predestined succesful combinations. Normally you can easily be inspired by colors you see during a live session. Tweaking a reference photo thereafter is also possible. If you subsequently solarize a motif then it’s opening up a can of worms though.

Solarization

You see, applying solarisation isn’t very difficult. It’s a matter of inverting some tonal regions whereas you keep others as they are. This doesn’t apply to the realm of colour though. In fact, color and solarization don’t match really. They are a world on their own, I think. Throwing in a color scheme almost immediately will cancel the solarized look. Perhaps that is what I wanted but it delivered me exciting yet unexplainable and inconsistent new planes.

Troubles Solved

Such distorted forms can appear to stand on their own too much. You see, arch enemy is a partial or even total loss of coherence in the intended composition. Guess what. That was my fate initially. I happy-go-luckily threw in some colors I liked. Soon, the painting became clotted with to many colors that also were too saturared. Enter a paintstakingly long period of doubts and desperation, searching for solutions. Finally I managed to cut to the chase. It was the color yellow being abundant. I remember my painting ‘Louise Brooks – 26-10-14’ in which I removed it too. Implementing a solution is easy yet very difficult to find. Often I feel like almost going off the rails on finding the right color scheme. However, now I find myself back on track eventually. The result is a hefty but pleasing balance between saturated and unsaturated colours.

Geometric Shapes

In the end I decided to incorporate a painting from the original reference picture. In the drawing I kept it out but now it came in handy. There were some geometric shapes I altered a bit. Hence, a homage to the triangle, cube and circle in the colors I used in the oil. Next tot his, I hope offer the viewer a spectacular new vision on the female form.

Oil on linen (60 x 80 cm)

Artist: Corné Akkers

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Slowly I can recognise your style, love your colours, on this painting the reflection of the table is wonderfully done, for me looks like a glass table :)

And you were not wrong indeed. It is a glass table and I love that you see it, in spit of all my solarization and blurry moves!

  ·  11 months ago (edited)

By the way Corne wanted to ask the areas where you have smooth transmission from pink to turquoise, do you take ready paints or you are mixing and creating them?

By the way, here is a program that will help you to see what is happening with your account, you might have seen it already:

https://steemworld.org/@corneakkers

If you see you have some Steem and Steem Dollar that you need to claim and also you could do Power Up:

image.png

Thanks. I didn't see that page yet. I will study it. As stated before, I am a bit of a dork here. I haven't studied crypto before and I haven't tried NFT's before for that matter. As I understand it correctly, I can claim my rewards now or in the future. What do you suggest? Leave them a bit and let it grow? I am not sure what you do mean with Power Up? You mean, buy more Steem?

As to smooth transitions, I blend with my fingers in this one. If you like you can see me do it here in a small YT movie I made. I think I can post these too in my future posts:

Thanks for pointing me out my personal page!

Best wishes,

Corné

Hi Corne,

Yes, there is a lot that you will discover, but it is not so difficult, actually there are many users from Venezuela, Indonesia, Africa who using their Steem for daily living. Once you have payout of the post it appears as, this is my wallet today

image.png

There are:

-Steem Power that is when you click in wallet claim will automatically go to Steem Power

  • Steem, that is liquid Steem, that you can claim and it will be in your saving, just waiting till next action or you can Power Up, that will go into your Steem Power, that means your account will grow the strength so next time you Upvote someone you will be able to give more.

_Steem Dollar, there is very little of it, you also can convert int into Steem Power because there is nothing much you can do with it.

I usually claim reward and transfer to Vesting, that means to Power up, that is why slowly my Steem Power is 156K

Here I am attaching one of the post of one user who is showing his Power Up step by step just if you do not know how to do:

https://steemit.com/hive-184714/@mrdani12/4ffyrl-weekly-power-up-or-powering-up-5-steem-to-steem-power-or

By the way, thank you for the video, I just want wonder how dry is the lower layer of colour and do you try to finish the work alla prima or you wait till some layers are dry?

Thanks and I will look into it.

To answer your question: I fact it's soft pastel and I don't need to account for drying time. Doing this in oil it works best by blending wet-in-wet, preferably with a finish of a fan brush.

The pastel in fact was done alla prima but oil can take make layers to complete. Mostly I do oils within 1 or 2 weeks. Pastels in one day or a couple.