The Very Thought of you – final images

This is a easel image taken of The Very Thought of You (24inches by 8 ft) on August 1st.

This is that same painting finished, on August 15th.  There was the thought on July 30th that this painting was done.  After doing the Birthday painting, everything changed, and after some trial and plenty of error, I good fit was found to move this work forward.  Tomorrow,  it is hoped that a much larger and detailed image will be posted on the website.  Tonight,  starts a work by Chopin “Tristesse.”

Scott Von Holzen

The Journal – so it starts

Just finished The Very Thought of You.  I am going to post the before Birthday and after Birthday pictures to show how one day of sustained effort does make a difference.  It surprised me. That one painting changed the look of two works not just Thoughts but also Vivaldi’s Four Seasons Spring.

I need to better understand this; and that is one of the reasons I am starting this page. I have always been interested in the lives of Artists; but  way more interested in their daily techniques and how they did things, and went about their daily painting chores.  For example, I know Van Gogh was passionate about his painting but I want to know where he got his canvases from, what brushes did he use, how did he store his canvases and then ship them to Theo.  That stuff I find interesting.   That is the stuff about this art that is going to be IN the Category Artist Notes.

Scott

S_V_H The Long & Winding Road images1-11

History of a 24 inch by 6 foot painting from start to finish July 31st 11 hours.

July 31st is my Birthday and always a day that is reserved for special activities.  A number of these July 31st have been used to do what is never done throughout the year:  start a painting and finish it all in one day.

It takes from two weeks to over a month of evenings and weekends to complete a work of art.  Picking the music and completing it all in one day requires more spontaneity and faster decision making, that leads to different techniques being tried, and lessons learned, which helps push everything forward.

11:57am

Five  songs were picked the night before mainly because each could be a possible fit on a 6 foot canvas with 80 millimeters notes: Bridge Over Trouble Water, I Am the Walrus,  Against the Wind, Comfortably Numb, and The Long and Winding Road. Comfortably Numb was quickly dropped because of the note range made it difficult to fit the 2 foot height of the canvas.  The rest eventually where dropped because of lack of interest, available words, or note length.  The Long And Winding Road was finally chosen for these reasons: Great Beatles song, the note range and number would fit, and the words ” Anyway I’ve Tried” fit nice as a reflection of the artist thoughts and a twist to the original wording.

When doing a fast painting  a technique for choosing  colors was tried again this year.  The previous year it was  a painting by Vincent Van Gogh’s Wheatfield With Crows that provided the color theme.  This year Landscape At Twilight was chosen (image from the Vincent Van Gogh Museum Amsterdam).

The colors of the this painting  completed by Van Gogh a month before his death, provided  the color choices.  This became over the hours a huge time saver when it came to color decisions.  Coming back to that painting,  from the book Van Gogh’s Van Goghs,  kept everything in focus and the path straight (for the most part),  became a great discipline tool, and  prevented the loss of direction which could have killed the timeline.

12:54

It starts this way with a few lines in pencil drawn for the placement of the  musical staff.

1:42 pm

The base paints used are always acrylics (they dry in minutes), mostly Golden paints, but this time a Liquitex heavy body Cadmium Yellow light hue started it all.

2:46 pm

Here looking at the Van Gogh painting certain areas gained color emphasis.  This occured through out the day until the point where the work needed to define its own identity, which became evident  in the later evening.

3:08 pm

Interestingly in the past most of the movement of the base colors for the staffs have been horizontal to emphasize the movement of the music across the canvas.   This time the greens of paint where all applied with vertical strokes to relate to the grasses in the Van Gogh picture.

4:02 pm

Did not think the background was done, but had to break for an early dinner.

4:03 pm to 5:30 pm Dinner at a Downtown restaurant with the mango margarita being better then the meal.

Returning to the painting,  surprisingly,  the time away had allow the acrylics to dry completely which now  made the work appear to pop. That was all that needed to move forward to begin placing the music.

7:31 pm

The color for the notes, green with darker edging was chosen to match Van Gogh’s structure of the trees.  Although, he made have used black for his edging, for this work a water based Phthalo Green Blue Shade was used. Water based oils by Winsor & Newton are used because they dry slowly allowing more time to shape the images.

8:05pm

The use of Cobalt Blue, comes from the building and near by from the  middle area of the Van Gogh painting,  was added to create a flow for the painting horizontally.   More vertical greens where added to fill in and enhance that effect.

8:54 pm

The beams and the two flags on the 8th notes were a challenge.  A techniques that is being used on the current project, The Very Thought of you, did not work here. There was moments of doubt and some direction loss. What brought it all back on track was the excepting of limits and  returning to the Van Gogh paintings color choices to make the decisions needed to move on.

9:45 pm

Here all the notes where given their final shape and color mix with the edges darkened as much as possible, again to reflect Van Gogh edging technique from the painting.

11:44 pm

The Finished work. The two ties, (those swirly things) where another stumbling point, but again the Van Gogh painting colors came to the rescue and Burnt Sienna was used that worked out great.  Finally the signature, small an faint by normal standards, was put in the middle left of the canvas, again using a Van Gogh color choice, Raw Sienna,  instead of the normal Cadmium Reds that would not fit this look.

11:59 pm

The tired and late look (forced smile) of the artist and the painting The Long and Winding Road.

(a larger and higher quality image of The Long and Winding Road will be appearing on the artist website in the next day)