Sunday, December 5, 2010
Monday, July 19, 2010
John Ottis Adams

I post this example of a work by John Ottis Adams without much to say. I believe the work speaks for itself. However, briefly, I would note that there is a subtleness to the handling of the sitter’s skin in that not only reflects a soft, delicate nuance but also suggests a beautifully inviting texture. It is a wonderful piece of mastery to emulate. Thank you.
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe
Ilya Repin - Detail

I have posted this image before on another blog I have but in recently discussing this artist with my painting student Luda I thought it necessary to once again put this image up on my blog. It is a detail from Ilya Repin's painting Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky (Russian: Моде́ст Петро́вич Му́соргский,Modest Petrovič Musorgskij. This to me is perhaps one of his strongest pieces for it's depth of emotion and attention to building up textures. I could study this .jpg for hours. I hope you find this image as invigorating as I do.
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe
Metropolitan Museum of Art Sketches
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe



Saturday, January 16, 2010
Vasari Paints

I wanted to briefly write about a line of paint that I have discovered through my friends and various artists that I admire in the New York gallery scene. Vasari Paints is a line of hand-crafted oil paint produced in small batches with an attention to detail and a focus upon the traditional old master materials for the purest of colors. One might imagine that as a result the paint is rather expensive and it certainly can be however by taking advantage of on-line sales you can stock up on the colors that you need here and there.
The color comparison as seen in a side-by-side evaluation with other brands is remarkable as the color is more vibrant and of a much higher quality without any wax additives, etc. If you are unable to invest in Vasari products an alternative is Windsor & Newton "Artist Grade" which is a very nice line as well. I have begun to update my materials in my own studio to include Vasari brand paint and am buying them in small groups so as to not overwhelm myself with the costs of what can be expensive products. My wife generously bought me four tubes (seen above) flake white, burnt sienna, yellow ochre, and permanent bright red as my Christmas present this past holiday season. I have just begun using them but I am very excited to be adding them to my palette. I am following Sharon Sprung's palette which is generally around 9 colors and is outline previously in my blog. As always, I would encourage you to leave questions or comments below and please feel free to follow me on twitter at www.twitter/wseccombe.com Thank you.
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe
Thursday, January 7, 2010
Exhibition of New Works
Hello all-
I'd like to send out a quick email to mention that I am participating in my second big show in Manhattan coming up at the Salmagundi Club on Fifth Ave. I am exhibiting three new works in the Junior/Scholarship show. The reception date is January 14th, 6 p.m. In addition to the reception date, the show hangs from January 5th to January 22nd, and entrance is free. Please visit the Salmagundi Club's website at www.salmagundi.org for more information. I look forward to seeing you there. Thank you.
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe


Monday, November 23, 2009
Salmagundi Club's Website

As a member of the Salmagundi Club's Jr./Scholarship Artists we recently gathered to discuss the upcoming 2010 gallery events, etc. in addition to ideas towards updating the club's somewhat antiquated website. As it stands now, the current website is rather static, and in many ways out-of-date technologically speaking. It really is a very basic approach to website design and does not allow the club any quick and practical solutions to constant updating and back side uploading by the front office adminstration.
Robert Pilsbury, Vice President of the club and Chairman of the Jr./Scholarship members suggested that we post a blog to encourage fellow artists to submit any suggestions and ideas that they may have to develop a much more technically efficient and interesting website. A website that would be more technically advanced while offering the types of interactive features appropriate to the artistic community. Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated. Thank you for your response.
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe
Tuesday, September 29, 2009
Steven Assael Demo
In looking on the internet for Steven Assael demo's I came across two great blogs which already feature examples, Art Babel and Art Demonstrations.com (both on blogspot.com), thank you bloggers. I cannot take credit for the content on either blog however they are fantastic when paired together. Below, features not only a step-by-step of Assael's painting process but also .jpgs of two other works. Included is an up close example of his broken color method while the other is simply a head study. Finally, I am including a description of his process that appears to be from a student attending the demonstration. Thank you.
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe












Excerpt from blog:
These are notes I took watching Steven Assael paint. Here is a list of the colors I noticed on the palette. There were more, but these are the ones that were used frequently.
List of colors:
Burnt Sienna
Alizarin Crimson
Violet
Ultramarine blue
Prussian Blue
Cadmium green light
Viridian
Burnt umber
Ivory black
Transparent oxide red
Holbein brown pink
Transparent yellow ochre
Yellow ochre
Cadmium red light
Cadmium orange
Cadmium Yellow
Naples Yellow light
Brilliant Yellow light
Titanium White
Steve makes these colors work by blending on the canvas. He would often take a beaten large fan brush and slap in a highlight down the length of an arm in pure white, which would seem too light until he uses mixtures of more or less cad red, ochre and sienna and blends these without white loosely over the same arm. Next he might take a green and work out from the cool halftones in the same way. By this time he had subdued the intensity of the white and by painting all these colors over each other and mixing them together created a beautiful subtle color scheme with lots of broken color and texture. At this point he might restate his lights. This process is very loose with no respect paid to edges of form as these can be established later. Last he would model his darks. This was done with mostly sable brushes. He chose his dark color not for the way it looked but for how it would blend with the other colors already there. For instance alizarin crimson would create a luminous reddish haze when he used it. This would be great for the space between fingers or the transparent flesh in an ear but terrible for a cool blue area around the eye socket. In the cool areas he would often use a purple or a mixed dull greenish color with a bit of umber and a green or blue . When painting these darks he blends out from the darkest point I never saw him block in a chunky dark it was always a soft delicate subtle process where the finish starts to emerge.
Some frequent mixtures:
In the lights often Brilliant yellow light or naples were mixed with cad red, Alizarin or Yellow ochre for warmer colors and the same brilliant yellow could be mixed with a purple or green to cool the light areas. For richer color areas mixtures of naples or brilliant yellow with ochre, cad red or either of the siennas were used.
In the shadows he often would mix burnt siena and cad green, or burnt siena and alizarin for hot areas. Finally for the dark shadow accents he might use pthalo blue mixed with burnt sienna and alizarin.
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe


Excerpt from blog:
These are notes I took watching Steven Assael paint. Here is a list of the colors I noticed on the palette. There were more, but these are the ones that were used frequently.
List of colors:
Burnt Sienna
Alizarin Crimson
Violet
Ultramarine blue
Prussian Blue
Cadmium green light
Viridian
Burnt umber
Ivory black
Transparent oxide red
Holbein brown pink
Transparent yellow ochre
Yellow ochre
Cadmium red light
Cadmium orange
Cadmium Yellow
Naples Yellow light
Brilliant Yellow light
Titanium White
Steve makes these colors work by blending on the canvas. He would often take a beaten large fan brush and slap in a highlight down the length of an arm in pure white, which would seem too light until he uses mixtures of more or less cad red, ochre and sienna and blends these without white loosely over the same arm. Next he might take a green and work out from the cool halftones in the same way. By this time he had subdued the intensity of the white and by painting all these colors over each other and mixing them together created a beautiful subtle color scheme with lots of broken color and texture. At this point he might restate his lights. This process is very loose with no respect paid to edges of form as these can be established later. Last he would model his darks. This was done with mostly sable brushes. He chose his dark color not for the way it looked but for how it would blend with the other colors already there. For instance alizarin crimson would create a luminous reddish haze when he used it. This would be great for the space between fingers or the transparent flesh in an ear but terrible for a cool blue area around the eye socket. In the cool areas he would often use a purple or a mixed dull greenish color with a bit of umber and a green or blue . When painting these darks he blends out from the darkest point I never saw him block in a chunky dark it was always a soft delicate subtle process where the finish starts to emerge.
Some frequent mixtures:
In the lights often Brilliant yellow light or naples were mixed with cad red, Alizarin or Yellow ochre for warmer colors and the same brilliant yellow could be mixed with a purple or green to cool the light areas. For richer color areas mixtures of naples or brilliant yellow with ochre, cad red or either of the siennas were used.
In the shadows he often would mix burnt siena and cad green, or burnt siena and alizarin for hot areas. Finally for the dark shadow accents he might use pthalo blue mixed with burnt sienna and alizarin.
Sunday, September 27, 2009
Understanding Values
I am constantly searching for ways to development my skills as a painter and one skill in particular is my ability to observe. One of the most important aspects of creating a strong painting is through accurate observation of value progressions. What are value progressions? Value progressions are the small incremental changes from white to black (white being 1 and black being 11) that occur on a scale and the subsequent tones of gray in between. The value scale that I have seen most often or that I use personally is a 9 step value system. I have also seen them as an 11 step system as seen in the picture below. Accurate value progressions are the key to life-like painting as it is based upon small shifts in light and dark that ultimately help to model form accurately.
I have learned recently that a great way to see your value progressions and your painting in terms of value, thus removing hue and saturation; is to observe your piece through a red colored glass or acetate film. These are easily purchased through the internet, camera stores, etc. This technique allows you to see your piece as a series of values as it eliminates color from the scenario. While hue and saturation are important in mixing a color, value is a far more important quality to your decision making process. Afterall, value is what the human eye responds to first before hue and saturation.
As seen below, I have illustrated this approach by using my most recent painting "Burlesque Girl" as an example. On the one hand, you will see the painting as it is, in full color and a second option as observed through a red filter.

Note how the red acetate simplifies the work into value scales and how colors that may appeared different might be much more closely related than initially tought. It is easy to see that while in some instances I believed the color to be working correctly, I may have considered adjusting the values more so to create a richer experience of the work in general. Some forms may have been further rendered including a step here or there to help to describe the form better as it turns in space. Value may also have been adjusted in large areas to create a better separation and compelling composition. Although the girl is obviously the center of attention and the values are generally successful here, had I utilized this approach from the beginning the value shifts might be more subtle and help to describe the form better. The thought here is simple, that while color is important, value is the key to creating realistic, life-like paintings. You may subscribe to this blog by following the link on the right hand side or the page or follow me on twitter at http://twitter.com/wseccombe. Thank you.
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe

As seen below, I have illustrated this approach by using my most recent painting "Burlesque Girl" as an example. On the one hand, you will see the painting as it is, in full color and a second option as observed through a red filter.


Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe
Tuesday, September 22, 2009
Study for "Burlesque Girl"

Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe
Friday, September 4, 2009
"John on Sunday" Portrait Demo
This series of photos was taken during a portrait painting demonstration I held at the Salmagundi Club in New York City earlier this spring. I finally have had an opportunity to post the "step-by-step" process of "John on Sunday" which was completed in about a 3 hours sitting. Below outlines my color palette, initial approach and the logic that goes into the basic portrait painting process. Become a subscriber to this blog by following the link on the right hand side of the page or follow me at Twitter http://twitter.com/wseccombe. Thank you.
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe
I began the demonstration by placing John (seen above) to the left of the canvas with a colored backdrop added for additional color. Two spot lights were included as well; one being to the right of the model while the other was placed directly behind the canvas. This provides similar lighting situations for both the model and the painting.
Here is an initial study I had created of John prior to the painting session to get a better sense of his features and the angle I might use during the presentation.




-Titanium White
-Raw Umber
-Burnt Umber
-Burnt Sienna
-Alizarin Crimson
-Permanent Rose
-Cad. Red Light
-Cad. Orange
-Raw Sienna
-Yellow Ochre
-Cad. Yellow Light
-Brilliant Green
-Veridian Green
-Cerulean Blue
-Cobalt Blue
-Purple Dioxazine
-Ivory Black
-Medium: 3 parts Mineral Spirits / 1 part Linseed Oil ( in small jar)
-18x24" glass palette mounted on gray-toned masonite



With a little more fine tuning the final portait is completed.

"John on Sunday'
20x20"
Oil on Panel
20x20"
Oil on Panel
Thursday, September 3, 2009
Robert Armetta - Average Flesh Tones
Hot off the presses this morning is the latest and most updated flesh tones palette provided to me by my friend and mentor Robert Armetta. Earlier in this blog you may have discovered a flesh tones palette which outlines color mixtures for basic academic flesh tones. This is the palette I learned on at the New York Academy of Art while studying with Robert. Below, you will find the update to this palette which he asked if I'd post. I will be interested to play with these combinations as I always enjoy learning new approaches to this process. On a side note, he will be appearing in the October issue of The Artist's Magazine so make sure to pick up your copy then. As always, you can follow me on Twitter at http://twitter.com/wseccombe. Thank you.
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe

Thursday, July 16, 2009
Society of Illustrators Figure Drawing

Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe
Saturday, July 4, 2009
Study of Richard

Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe
Friday, June 26, 2009
Antonio Mancini




His first trip to Paris was in 1877 where he was introduced to a number of the French Impressionists including Degas, Manet, as well as portrait painter John Singer Sargent. He later became close friends with Sargent, who called Mancini "the greatest living painter." Sargent became an avid supporter of Mancini's work and often spoke highly of him to gallery owners and collectors. Mancini had a wonderful sense of theatrics about his paintings and "After the duel" is a dramatic example of this sensibility.

Mancini was very much inspired by the Impressionists and thereafter loosened his own brush strokes. His paintings began to take on a brightened palette with a very bold impasto technique (impasto: a technique used in painting, where paint is laid on an area of the surface very thickly so that the brush or palette-knife strokes are visible. Paint can also be mixed right on the canvas.) The word "impasto" is Italian in origin; meaning "dough" or "mixture"; the verb "impastare" translates variously as "to knead", or "to paste". on canvas.
Mancini employed an unusual grid technique which can be still seen in his work today. This approach was a technique where in which the artist would apply a series of criss-crossing strings or wire to a frame or canvas stretcher. During a sitting, the artist employed 2 of these gridded frames. One frame would then be placed in front of the model while the other was placed directly in front of the artist's canvas thus providing an accurate visual context for deciphering proportions and compositions.

Many of Mancini's paintings display this technique and it is clear that these grids were placed directly on the canvas and then painted upon. Mancini would then remove the grid from
the painting and what
remained was a ghostly indication of these small square sections. Walter Richard Sickert, a mutual friend of both Sargent and Mancini, explained Mancini’s sometimes very unusual method in 1927:
"His paintings were done through a wire grille, whose squares correspond with a grille before the sitter. The marks of the grille remain. The sitter being, as it were, pinned down, retained of his mobility alone the facial expression. But, trembling and snorting within that restriction, there is an extraordinary vivacity, there is power and a dashing impasto."

This method can best be seen in his panting of "de Lafenis". Not only did he employ this unusual technique but he also employed such materials as shards of glass, and foil. This gave the paint more illumination; again, "de Lafenis" is a strong example.
The Philadelphia Art Museum currently owns fifteen oil paintings and three pastels by Antonio Mancini. The first American exhibition of Antonio Mancini's work was at the Philadelphia Museum of Art.

Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe
Bibliography Sources:
www.wikipedia.org
www.artcyclopedia.com
www.jssgallery.org
www.nytimes.com
www.philamuseum.org
Wednesday, June 24, 2009
DuCret School of Art Materials List
Below is the latest supply list I have put together for the portrait painting class I will be teaching at the DuCret School of Art for the Summer '09 schedule. I would encourage you to follow me at Twitter at http://twitter.com/wseccombe and become a follower. Thank you.
Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe

Billy Seccombe
www.billyseccombe.om
https://twitter.com/wseccombe

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