You may apply these same tests everywhere in nature. Even in a gray day, when
the sun is not so positive a factor in distributing light, and the shadows are
so subtle that it is difficult to discover them, there is always some mass of
foliage, the silver sheen from an old shingled roof, the glare of a white wall,
which marks for the composition its lightest light, while a corresponding dark
can always be found somewhere in the tree-trunks, under the overhanging eaves,
or in the broken crevices of the masonry. cheap oil painting
So it is with every other expression of nature. Even on a Venetian lagoon,
where the sky and water are apparently one (not really one to the quick eye of an expert, the
water always being one tone lower than the sky—that is, more gray than the
overbending sky)—even in this lagoon you will find some one portion of the
surface lighter than any other portion; and in expressing it your eye first and
your brush next must catch in the opalescent sweep of delicious color under your
eye its exact quantity of black and white. By black and white I mean, of course,
that excess or absence of pure color which when translated into pure black and
white would express the meaning of the subject-matter, as one of Raphael
Morghen's engravings on steel gives you the feeling and color in his masterly
rendering of Da Vinci's "Last Supper." art oil paintings
In my judgment one of the great landscapes of modern times is the picture by
the distinguished Dutch painter, Mauve, known as "Changing Pasture," which is
now owned by Mr.
Charles P. Taft, of Cincinnati. Here the factor of mass is carried to its utmost
limit. Sky one mass; flock of sheep another mass; and the foreground, sweeping
under the sheep and beyond until it is lost in the haze of the distance, another
mass, or, if one chooses to put it that way, another broad gradation of a
section of the picture: the highest light being some infinitesimal speck in the
diaphanous silver sky, the strongest dark being found somewhere in the
foreground or in the flock of sheep. frames for oil paintings
By a strict adherence to this law of one supreme light and one supreme dark
does Mauve's work, as it were, get back from and out of his canvas, as from the
record of a phonograph into which some soul has breathed its own precise purpose
and intent.
So, too, does nature often call out to you fixing your attention, often
shrouding in shadow the unimportant in the landscape, while high up above the
gloom it holds up to your gaze a white candle of a minaret or the bared breast of an
Alpine peak reflecting the loving look of a tired sunbeam bidding it
good-night. oil paints supplies
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