Friday, 10 June 2011

Colour Time

This week we havebeen working traditionally with colour, painting and mixing with acrylics.  It was quite enjoyable, though frustrating at times with amount of work involved in even a little piece.  but none the less the week proved ver useful, as it has allowed me to think much more carefully about my colour choices.

Above we have a value study.  The grays to the left were made first, and were intended to showcase different grays ranging from white to black.  Then we had t apply the same value of each gray to a colour right next to it.  To see colour as value was taxing.

Above we did the same thing, painting in just grays to get the values, and then applying colour to match them.  The theme for that day and the next was monkey.

Here we had two assignments.  The idea was to make an analogous color scheme and a split complimentary one.  Analogous means about 3 colors in a row on the color wheel, like all the greens and little blue on the one to the left.  Split complimentary means to choose a colour and then take the colours next to its complimentary, in this case I chose a certain red, who'se complimentary is green, and thus took the light blue and light green.

Next theme was coffee.  We had to tell a story about a person through coffee, starting in the morning at breakfast and continuing through lunch and dinner.  I decided to try a rectangular colour scheme this time around for the morning.  That means choosing colours that match in the shape of a rectangle on the colour wheel.  In this case it was Yellow and Orange paired up with Blue and Purple.  On the table is a passport and plane ticket.

In the next one I decided on another analogous scheme, choosing reds and pinks.  Now the person is on the plane and has placed their coffee on their tray.

The last one featuring the evening when our protagonist has landed and is waiting for his or her last bag usedd a split complimentary scheme.  Yellow with pink and blue as its complimentaries.

And the final one had the theme of The Three Bears.  Each bear had to have a different color scheme of sorts and we could choose to either have a piece per bear or compose them alltogether.  I chose to do them altogether due to time concerns.  This was just a simple scheme of red and blue, with a lot of value changes.  The one thing I wanted was to have the small bear be a combination of it's parents, but the color for that made it hard to see, so I made it more of low pink.


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