Art - Learn how to paint
Step-by-step painting tutorials featuring oil and digital painting techniques
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·3mo
I found out while doing these nose studies for class that I’m not that interested in noses by themselves. Of course, maybe it was just these noses in particular that I wasn’t excited about. Perhaps if they were a little less perfect, they would be more interesting to paint. In an effort to make these noses more interesting, I decided to pair them with Beethoven’s “Ode to Joy”. It was one of my favorite pieces we played in symphonic band way back in the dark ages. The nose references are...
I was only going to paint the eye for this study, but then I wanted to paint the tiny ear, the luminous skin, and the mouth. So it would have been weird to paint all of that and leave the nose off. This is after Sir Frederic Leighton‘s late 1870’s painting titled “Lucia”, which is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I couldn’t find much information about this painting, but I did notice when I started painting that it most likely was modeled after a Greek sculpture. I wasn’t interested ...
I was only going to paint the eye for this study, but then I wanted to paint the tiny ear, the luminous skin, and the mouth. So it would have been weird to paint all of that and leave the nose off. This is after Sir Frederic Leighton‘s late 1870’s painting titled “Lucia”, which is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I couldn’t find much information about this painting, but I did notice when I started painting that it most likely was modeled after a Greek sculpture. I wasn’t interested ...
I was only going to paint the eye for this study, but then I wanted to paint the tiny ear, the luminous skin, and the mouth. So it would have been weird to paint all of that and leave the nose off. This is after Sir Frederic Leighton‘s late 1870’s painting titled “Lucia”, which is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I couldn’t find much information about this painting, but I did notice when I started painting that it most likely was modeled after a Greek sculpture. I wasn’t interested ...
I was only going to paint the eye for this study, but then I wanted to paint the tiny ear, the luminous skin, and the mouth. So it would have been weird to paint all of that and leave the nose off. This is after Sir Frederic Leighton‘s late 1870’s painting titled “Lucia”, which is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I couldn’t find much information about this painting, but I did notice when I started painting that it most likely was modeled after a Greek sculpture. I wasn’t interested ...
I was only going to paint the eye for this study, but then I wanted to paint the tiny ear, the luminous skin, and the mouth. So it would have been weird to paint all of that and leave the nose off. This is after Sir Frederic Leighton‘s late 1870’s painting titled “Lucia”, which is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. I couldn’t find much information about this painting, but I did notice when I started painting that it most likely was modeled after a Greek sculpture. I wasn’t interested ...
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