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Alchemy and the Phoenix

How is A Fresco Made? Five Initial Steps

by Rebecca N King on 10/28/2009 6:02:28 PM
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My enthusiasm for fresco is growing everyday, as you might have noticed with these notes. Since I know you share an interest in art, I thought a description of the process was in order. Knowing what goes into creating a great work of art inevitably wins us all over, and persuades us to a greater appreciation of any artistic effort. After all, a little lime plaster, pigment, and water in skilled hands can bring us to our knees, persuade us to put our hands over our mouths, and think of things both in and out of the material world for just brief a minute in time. Isn’t that one thing all great art does? 

 Fresco requires a careful conception and execution. The artist must complete all drawings and preparatory cartoons prior to painting day. Since the artist is painting on to wet lime plaster, the drawing, paints and brushes must be mixed and ready at hand. 

Here are five initial steps the artist must take to begin a fresco.

 1. Conception and design: The artist needs to have a strong idea and composition for the finished painting long before the final layer of lime plaster, or intonaco, is laid. Usually the site and the funding are secured at this point as well. Remember the old story of the reluctant sculptor Michelangelo, commissioned for the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican? (This link is a general synopsis on Michelangelo, there are plenty of art historians out there with an even more thorough explanation of what happened.) All elements of the execution must be considered at this stage. If the fresco will be on a ceiling high above the viewer’s head, the artists must consider elements of potential distortion and any problems in the architectural design of the space. How will the finished work function in the space? How will the composition balanced? Will it create a sense of unity, repose, chaos? Will there be repetition and rhythm? What elements serve the artist’s larger aim? The artist then makes a compositional study. Here are images of the Sistine Chapel from the Vatican's online collections.

 2. Color study: After the artist has completed a rough compositional study with charcoal or graphite, he must consider the color palette of the painting. This is a key point for fresco painting. Certain pigments are more useful in fresco than in other mediums. Ultramarine with go fugitive if mixed with the lime white and must be handled with care. A small pastel color study allows the artists to conceive of the overall color effect he is looking for, and what pigment he may want to use to make a palette of premixed colors. 

 3. Charcoal, Graphite, and Conte Drawings: Once the artist has settled on his design and color palette, individual drawings of specific figures and portraits must be made. This is where rigorous draftsmanship is of utmost importance. Solid study of anatomy, proportion, form and balance are particularly necessary for success on painting day. Form is King in Fresco painting. The more familiar the artist is with the forms in space, and their emotive functions the more successful his painting will be. Here is Michaelangelo's study for the figure of Adam for the Sistine Chapel at the Vatican commissioned by Pope Julius II in 1508 from the British Museum's Prints and Drawings room. I'll never forget copying it there on rainy London afternoon. What an immense pleasure!  Check out the actual dimensions of the drawing; it is not large.

4. The Cartoons: Spatial relationships are also particularly important for the artist to consider when working with fresco. Once the drawings of the figurative elements in the fresco have been completed, the artist creates a gridded transfer of these drawings to the scale of the final work. These large cartoons are the actual size of the fresco, and give the artist yet another chance to investigate problems of distortion, proportion and distance. If the fresco design is for a ceiling, will the scale of the composition be appropriate for the viewing distance on the floor? If it is on a wall, how will it be viewed from different parts of the architectural space?

5. Tracings: Once the cartoons are created, large rolls of tracing paper are brought in to create tracings of each individual cartoon. These tracings capture the most important boundaries of the form in each drawing in preparation for the final painting day. These drawings are then punched with tiny holes to create a constellation style map of the final work. See the original drawing here.

Next week I’ll write some more about this process, to assist us all as we keep on looking a frescoes and savoring the colors! If you aren't that interested in fresco stay tuned, because I'll write about other art forms soon enough...I can't help but be interested in so many of them!

Yours,

Rebecca

To see past notes visit www.rebeccanking.com and check out my blog.

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Fresco

by Rebecca N King on 10/7/2009 7:40:08 PM
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This week I plunged back into fresco painting.  I worked on a project under my mentor Ben Long IV back in 2006 in Crossnore, NC, grinding color, pouncing drawings and helping with the various physical tasks included in preparation for creating a fresco.  While Long worked on the wall, I had the opportunity to experiment with fresco and paint several test fresco panels on terra cotta tiles.  I soon discovered it is a very different medium than oil.  The color and value are constantly changing as the lime dries, but it is a wonderful medium for permanent figurative work.  It requires a great deal of preparation, a unique vision for the final piece, and unflinchingly completed drawings.  Here are some details of the test panel I did yesterday. 



                    

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Ode to Rembrandt's Etchings & Painting Water

by Rebecca N King on 9/2/2009 8:02:56 PM
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ODE TO REMBRANDT'S ETCHINGS....

I don't do etchings yet, but some of my recent pen and ink drawings may eventually nudge me in that direction.  Pen and Ink doesn't have the exact same quality as etching, but it is a great place to start for experimentation, working out ideas, and working to capture the essence of a subject.   Ink drawings can go a long way toward enlightening the artist about tree forms and values that might otherwise be overlooked when working solely in color.  Ink drawings also tend to have their own charm and mystery quite unlike other kinds of drawing in that the artist is limited in the number of ways to explain what he is seeing.  Hatching, crosshatching, subtle whispering lines, and staccato marks all do their part to say what is needed. 

REFLECTIONS...

 Water is one of the most illusive and mysterious elements in outdoor painting.  It is interesting to consider how the water in the air changes the way we see everything.  On a misty summer morning many trees that are familiar to us may seem larger, farther away or strangely foreboding. But on a cool fall morning, all the water may be less hanging in the air and more in the streams and clouds, and everything is illuminated to a crisp.  Water in mass is particularly challenging, and yet it is perfect at giving trees that might be less interesting without it a peculiar dignity and voluminous mass.  When you start to consider the unifying element of water in a landscape you begin to gain an even greater appreciation for how Nature works.  The clouds hover over the waters of the earth and through their cycling all life lives in between.  So when painting a copse of tree hanging over a pond, it is not merely the copse you are aiming for but to share a minute glimpse of the whole thing.  That particular tree over that particular pond tells many tales.  To see more paintings with water check out some newly added paintings in the Western North Carolina file on my website www.rebeccanking.com.  Go to "Paintings and Drawings" and "Western North Carolina" to see more.

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Round 2

by Rebecca N King on 8/26/2009 7:55:37 PM
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On the Chopping Block
4x12 Oil on Gessoed Board
$980   
                                
                                                   

...From my Notebooks: ON MAKING PAINTINGS...

Nature is simply too complex to capture in one artistic effort.  The variation of mood, light, atmosphere, and color are enough to silent the proud and inspire the meek.  Sentimentality makes Nature cheap, and yet devoid of feeling and emotive energies it is easy for the artist to destory what he means to caress.  I have done my fair share of slaying.  I suppose temperance comes with age, and what one hopes for is the sparkle that inspired his first efforts to mature in volumes of visual depth, like a full bodied wine drunk at just the right time.  Wisdom gets decanted from Humility, and in the end your just glad to see all that is.

Hanging There 8x10
Oil on Linen on Board $895



DRAWINGS on View at
16 PATTON, Asheville, NC
RECEPTION SATURDAY NIGHT! 6-9

                                                                                                                                          
 Need more scratch, scrape, and scribble in your life?  Come out 16 Patton on Saturday night to see the drawings that will be on view featuring artists from 16 Patton and the work of guest artists from the Fine Arts League of the Carolinas, including me!  Great drawings are serious efforts at capturing a whole lot with nothing more than a burnt willow vine, a stick of graphite or fluid from a bottle.   Most art has something to do with the mystery of illusion, but the best drawings have a special pass to the sublime.

                                                                                                           Porch
                                                                                            Pen and Ink 5x7
                                                                                                            $275



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