Thursday, November 3, 2011

LARGE CALIFORNIA IMPRESSIONIST PLEIN AIR LANDSCAPE, MOUNTAINS, TREES BY TOM BROWN







The actual texture of paint on the canvas helps express the drama of this scene. I used bold, juicy strokes of oil paint to capture the early morning light washing across these mountains.

I created this on location during a Plein Air Workshop I taught for other artists. We met and painted from a high vantage point that gave us a sweeping panorama of the mountains and scenic landscape.

I used a combination of brushes, a palette knife and even my fingers to manipulate the paint on the canvas and capture the majestic grandeur we found so exciting in this scene.

Check the detail images for a better view of the texture on this canvas.

“THE DRAMA OF MORNING LIGHT” is a 12x16-inch Plein Air original oil painting available for a short time on eBay. Click here to bid:
http://www.ebay.com/sch/tombrownfineart/m.html?_nkw=&_armrs=1&_from=&_ipg=

ARTISTS: To emotionally connect with viewers it is necessary to put emotion into your work. The more clearly you can state your feelings in a painting, the more strongly you will connect with your viewers and the more success you will enjoy.

Some of the factors that attract buyers to paintings are surface texture, brush stroke technique, color-mixing, paint application, lighting, composition, control of value shapes, and mood.

“THE LOADED BRUSH” is my online lesson that covers all of these elements and more. It is available by email for just $20. (How many sales will it take to recoup that?) Email for details:
tombrownstudio@cox.net

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