The pastel landscape painting here depicts a pond located in Devil's Den preserve in either Weston or Redding, CT, or maybe both. It's hard to tell from the research I did online using my iPad app by Google. It seems the genius code warriors who wrote the Google maps
app on my iPad didn't include any town borderlines, so your guess is as good as
mine.
Fall foliage, wind-blown pond in a Paul Creedon pastel. |
After
much struggling I eventually got the foliage right in the top left-hand
quadrant, or in any event as right as I was going to get it at the time. Then the time came to work on the water.
How to Depict the Wind Blowing on the Water
The
next problem was to how to depict the wind blowing on the water of the pond.
After a couple of attempts at doing it the way the books told me to do it, (and failing in a truly spectacular fashion), I discarded everything I had ever
learned about pastel painting, grabbed a fistful of pastel pencils, and started
scribbling. The bottom left hand corner came out right on the first try.
Using Layers of Pastel Sprayed with Fixative
The
bottom right-hand portion didn't work out so easily. There are around 7 or
eight layers of utterly horrible stuff under what you now see, and each try was
sprayed with fixative and worked over again. The last version of the pastel finally got me where I
wanted to go.
If
you have looked at the still life paintings on this website you may have noticed
they tend heavily toward a representational approach. The above painting is the
most abstract I have done thus far, and was harder to do than any 9 put of 10
of the other paintings. A friend from college days looked at it, and said it
looked more real than reality.
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