Impressionist "Winter Cottage" with stages, notan, by Charlotte Herczfeld


Taking a walk in the park surrounding a manor, (Tyresö slott near Stockholm, Sweden) during one of the few sunny days in this unusually cold and snowy winter, I came upon this cottage, nestled in comfortably by snow and trees. While not a perfect scene, I saw some potentialities for a painting, and took some pictures.

Reference image:



Now, this is far from a perfect ref, so let's see what can be done with it. I really didn't like the straight dark band of distant land crossing the picture from left to right, the shape is quite boring, and separates the picture in two halves. I started to play with it in the small format of Notan, where I worked out how to place the darks and the lights, finding good relationships and interesting shapes. The first notan in top left is just an exploration of the actual image:



I simplify the Notan progressively, and in the middle row, rightmost picture, I'm starting to find what feels right. I still have to find a way to anchor the darker shapes to either the top or the bottom of the picture. I try bottom first, and that works fine. The notan marked with an arrow is the one I choose as a basis for the painting.

Next the 'cartoon drawing' was made on the artist's quality sandpaper, which was then blocked in with the underpainting. Follow the progress here:


The painting took over, and decided it wanted a stream instead of a road, in stage 2. Evaluating the image, I found the stream lead too quickly to the house in a boring straight line, so before continuing, I changed the shape of the banks, and worked a bit further on the background copse of winterbare trees. In stage 3, I have decided that the foreground trees need a softer approach than bare branches would be, so I add dried and browned clusters of leaves. Only in stage four do I scumble nearly white pastels over the snow, to give the coolness and whiteness of snow.

I've made an effort to keep the simple structure from the Notan, and here is how the finished painting in black and white looks side by side with the Notan:



Quite close, although I instituted a row of lower bushes to the mid left, to provide more depth in the painting.

Now, this is a fairly large painting, and details vanish when shrunk to such a small picture as seen on your computer screen. This detail shows how the blue of the sky is actually woven together with not only blues, but also greens and purples. This weaving is part of why my paintings can be called Impressionist:



When comparing with the largest picture of the painting, can you find from which part of the sky this closeup is taken?

6 Responses to Impressionist "Winter Cottage" with stages, notan, by Charlotte Herczfeld

Jimmie Bartlett
via charlotteherczfeld.com
Hello Charlotte, I clicked over from the wet canvas website. Your artworks are great. Your work shows that you put your hear and time into your paintings. Thanks for putting the demo steps in your blog in which you used to create a masterful painting. I am looking forward to seeing more of your work on wet canvas and will also be following your blog.
Robert Sloan
via charlotteherczfeld.com
Thank you for another wonderful lesson! I loved seeing all the stages and especially the close-up of the sky texture. I have been way too literal with my skies, I think it's time for me to get a little crazy with the hues in the setup and see what I can do with them! That is so gorgeous!



For some reason in applying the method to landscapes, I didn't stop to think that I should underpaint in something warm, like pink or orange. The sky is all light unless there's storm clouds -- and if there are storm clouds they'd be very rich modeled with blues, greens and violets in their shadows and pale yellows and pinks on their highlights. But I like a clear blue sky in some paintings, love those warm sunny days.



So next time I do one I'll try the pink sky! Thank you so much! It's so obvious now that I see it -- and I even DID it in that block study, just didn't connect it with "sky."



Robert
Charlotte Herczfeld
via charlotteherczfeld.com
Jimmie, Robert,

Thank you for your nice comments! I did reply earlier, but for some reason, the replies don't show.

Rob, the blue sky is light, so a warm underpainting helps it glow!

Charlie


abstract art
via charlotteherczfeld.com
Painting is entertainment time, the best interest of self-cultivation.

abstract art
via charlotteherczfeld.com
Painting is entertainment time, the best interest of self-cultivation.

Jan Baker
via charlotteherczfeld.com
Can't believe this beauty hasn't been sold yet- it's always been one of my favorites, Charlie!

alas and alack, this new fixed income business has nipped my discretionary spending in the bud...








Topics: Landscape | Notan | WIP 
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