In this crazy time period of social distancing, and more, one thing remains perfectly unchanged....blue skies, chirping birds and spring blooms are everywhere! I don’t know about you, but it makes me want to grab some of that resilience that occurs each Spring even after the hardest winter and use it to get through this time period. I am going to do some cooking, some reading and movie watching (and much needed reorganizing), but that cannot be my main focus. So I plan to be outside enjoying as much of it as I can and I am also issuing a challenge to you to paint along with me.
My first coronavirus challenge is to paint this beautiful and complicated nest constructed by one hard working genius bird. It’s like the Taj Mahal of residences and it deserves some scrutiny and applause.
The bird is very cute, too!
camera. Thank you, Gerry!
Lady Bird and her condo...
top of your painting warm and the bottom cool or vice versa.
I used an 11x15 piece of 300# paper and marked off a border so it will fit into a frame I have on hand.
I’m already planning to frame it ( I’m an optimist). I free sketched the bird and nest horizontally but
feel free to choose the size and orientation you like best. I masked several of the stems and sticks that
dominate the pattern. Next I sprayed water and dropped in local color, Hansa Yellow and Sap Green
with a little Cobalt Blue in the darker areas of the nest.
This is the prepared start of the nest
Notice I left a border on the page and I also saved the background for last. My order is the nest, the bird, then the background. I painted this within a one day time frame. I started with quinacridone gold and some darker browns like Sepia to begin the tangle of straw that holds this nest together. Talk about genius....every color known to Nature was already here. My task was simply to decide which ones to promote. I definitely kept a softer approach as I identified perfect areas for negative painting as well as alternating patterns of the sticks and branches. I used a beautiful mix of Prussian Blue with
Raw Sienna for some of my greens and a little Quin Red helped to darken the area that serves as the
entrance to the nest ( behind Lady Bird) so I also put some in the sticks of the nest.
Here is a little more detail. Now for the Bird. Not that she isn’t important but her house is like a mansion so I wanted her to be softer and maybe a little less in focus. Still, you tell me, I think she stole the show! I used Cadmium Orange to feature the breast and then added it to the nest as well. I later added the soft background using Cobalt blue and Windsor Violet to pull out my blues in both the bird and the nest.
Enjoy, share and be in touch with Nature...and with me!
Warm regards, Carol Sue