P is for Pissarro

L'Hermitage a Pontoise 1867, oil on canvas

 Camille Pissarro (1830 – 1903) was one of the French Impressionist painters. In 1866 he moved to Pontoise on the banks of the River Oise, on the outskirts of Paris and lived there until 1884. He loved the area and painted 300 or so paintings in that period. L’Hermitage à Pontoise, the painting above, is one of my favourites of his, painted in a realistic rather than an impressionist style, showing an idyllic village scene and the hills behind. I like all the detail and his use of light and shade drawing attention to the figures on the road and highlighting the houses.

Red Roofs, 1877, oil on canvas

Ten years later he painted Red Roofs showing a corner of the village in winter with the traditional 18th century houses viewed through the trees. I like the blend of colours with the differing tones of the red of the roofs, fields and earth in the foreground, contrasting with the green of the grass and the blue of the sky. The twisting forms of the trees with their vertical trunks contrast sharply with the geometric shapes of the houses.

An ABC Wednesday post.

ABC Wednesday – S is for …

… Alfred Sisley (1839 – 1899)

Sisley was an English Impressionist landscape artist, born in France where he lived for most of his life.

This is one of his paintings that particularly appeals to me – Small Meadows in Spring (c.1881)

This shows ‘le Chemin des Petits Prés‘, an oil painting of a riverside path which ran along the left bank of the Seine, connecting the villages of Veneux and By. The path has now been replaced by a paved walkway. The village visible on the opposite bank is Champagne.

Teaser Tuesday

A few weeks ago I started to go to an art club and being a beginner I was full of doubts about my ability to draw.  Even though I’ve enjoyed the sessions, I felt as though I’d been dropped in the deep end with sketching then painting a view of Bamburgh Castle in watercolour. I got the proportions all wrong, but it didn’t look terrible even if it didn’t look like Bamburgh Castle.

So I decided to see what books we have that would help me to improve and found this little book which looks excellent.

It is The Right Way to Draw Landscapes by Mark Linley. He introduces the book by describing it as:

… a complete course for beginner artists who want to learn how to draw landscape pictures. Step-by-step instructions are given for most of the drawings used as examples within these pages. You will start with easy-to-do studies which have been created to boost your self-confidence, and to show you that anyone can learn this skill. If you have never drawn anything except breath, don’t worry. I have ways of teaching you! (page 7)

It seems that thinking success is the secret. We have to think ‘I can’ and we really can:

Where so many people go wrong is that they allow self doubt to interfere. They worry about whether they can draw something, more than how to do so.  If you think you can’t draw a landscape, you will be right; you will fail. This wrong instruction (“I can’t”) will be acted upon by your subconscious mind – your “computer” – just as quickly and as powerfully as when you have “I can” working for you. Unfortunately, many of us seem to be brain-washed to think negatively. Perhaps lack of encouragement during our school-days has resulted in what has become a bad habit. Bad habits can be changed! You just have to know that we all have unlimited potential. (page 10)

So, I shall be testing this out and see just how much I can improve with the help of this little book – I may even post the results!

Teaser Tuesday is a weekly event hosted by MizB where you share €˜teasers’. I’ve adapted it a bit to include more information about the book and longer teasers.