Lake Como painting progression
I am working on putting together a video post, but I have to get my 9 year old to help me with some of the technical side first.đ So today I am relying on the good old fashioned blog post, sharing a step-by-step painting in progress.
I had such a good time with my last Lake Como Painting that thought Iâd âlaissez les bons temps roule,â (as the Cajun in me likes to say.) I chose a scene in Varenna from my photo archives, one of my favorite memories that now feels like both yesterday and a long time ago. I chose one of my favorite canvas sizes, a 24x30â, and a color scheme of jewel tones that always cheers me up.
My starting approach for the last year or so is to just very casually sketch out my composition lightly in sienna oil pastel. The Sennlier oil pastel is so soft and lovely that it erases my change of mind with a very low stain, and yet allows me to indicate some shading at the same time.
Once I am more or less satisfied with my composition, I begin laying in some of the shadow areas of my painting, to get a feeling for the overall value pattern of my painting.
I am generally trying to keep things very broad as I lay down the initial color. While not all of the water is âin shadowâ, I decided to lay in the general color because I felt it would help me make a decision about the composition ( as you will see in the next photo.)
My initial idea was to include the foreground shoreline with a couple of rowboats, but at the same time I wanted to keep the distant horizon below the middle point, which pushed the shoreline down. After laying in the water I decided the shoreline wasnât really doing much for me or the composition.
This is better, I think. Even working from photos in the studio, there is still a lot of decision making that goes into the process. You donât have to be a slave to a photo and paint something in, just because itâs there in the reference. This is my painting, after all, and sometimes the best thing I can do for my work is to simplify. There may be a future painting with the shoreline boats as the feature, you never know, but sometimes itâs better to say one thing with clarity than several things with confusion.
At this point it was time to step away and make dinner, but I felt like I was at a good stopping point so this is where I left off last evening. I will still need to address the rest of that white canvas and make additional adjustments to the water and boats , but now I have a pretty solid idea of where Iâm going next.