The Term.—The word "values" is seldom understood by the average
individual, yet it should not be difficult to take in. It means simply the
relation between degrees of strength of light and dark, and of color considered
as light and dark. Translate the word into "importance," and think what it
means. The relative importance, strength, force, power, value, of a touch of
color to make itself felt in the whole—that is its value. A weak value is a note
which does not make itself felt; a strong value is one which does. A false value
is a touch of color which has not its proper relation to the other spots or
masses of color in the picture, considered as light and
dark—not as color per se.
Importance.—As soon as you grasp this idea you see at once how
important values must be to the whole picture. It is not possible to do any good
work, either in black and white or color, without it. In one sense it is
incidental to drawing. When you consider drawing as the expression of modelling,
the relative roundness of parts, and of relief,as well as outline, values come
into play to give the relations of planes of light and dark in black and white.
In this it becomes part of drawing. oil paintings
Values and Color.—As soon, however, as color becomes a part of the
picture, values become the basis of modern painting as distinguished from the
painting of previous centuries. Values, of course, always existed wherever good
painting existed, because you cannot paint without recognizing the relations,
the relative pitch and relative strength of tones. But the word is never heard
in relation to old masters. It is apparently of quite modern coinage and use,
and it probably was coined because of a new and greater importance of the fact
which it represents. art oil paintings
The older painters in painting a picture kept parts of a whole object—a head
or a figure, say—in relation to itself; and that was values—but restricted
values. The whole picture was arranged on the basis of arbitrary lighting, which
entered into the scheme of composition of that picture. This is not values, but
what is generally understood by the older writers when they speak of
"chiaroscuro." The modern painter deals little with chiaroscuro. It is almost
obsolete as a technical word. Arbitrary arrangement of light and shade in a
picture is not usual nowadays, and consequently the word which expressed it has
dropped somewhat into disuse. oil paintings online
Basis
of Modern Painting.—Instead of the old composition in arbitrary light and
shade, the modern painter accepts the actual arrangement of light as the basis
of his picture, and spreads the values over the whole canvas. In this way the
quality of "value" becomes the very foundation of the modern picture. For you
cannot accept the ordinary or actual condition of light, as governing the light
and shade of your picture, without extending the same scheme of relations over
the whole canvas. Every most insignificant spot of light and shade and color, as
well as the most significant, must keep its place, must hold its true relation
to every other spot and to all the rest. Each value must keep its place
according to the laws of fact, or it is out of touch with the whole. The whole
picture must be either on a scheme of general fact, or a scheme of general
arbitrary arrangement. Any one piece of arbitrary arrangement in this connection
must be backed up by other pieces of arbitrary arrangement, or else there must
be no arbitrary arrangement at all. The modern painter accepts the former; and
the importance of "values" is the result. art oil painting for sale
Absolute and Relative Values.—We may speak of values as absolute or
relative. This relates to the key or pitch of a painting. It is the contribution
to the art of painting which was made by the French painter, Manet. You may
paint a picture[Pg
141]in the same pitch as nature, or you may transpose it to a higher
or a lower pitch.
The relations of the different values of the picture will hold the same
relation to each other as the values of nature do to each other. But the actual
pitch of each, the relation of each to an absolute light or an absolute dark,
will be higher or lower than in nature. This would be relative values. art oil paintings for sale
Or the pitch, relation to absolute light and dark, of each value may be the
same, value for value, as in nature. This would be absolute values.
The attempt at absolute values was not made at all before Manet's time. A
landscape was frankly painted down, or darker, from the pitch of nature, and an
interior as frankly
painted up, or lighter. In both cases the values had to be
condensed,—telescoped, so to speak,—because pigment would not express the
highest light nor the lowest dark in nature; and to have the same number of
gradations between the highest and lowest notes in the picture, the amount of
difference between each value had to be diminished—butrelatively they
were the same. The degree of variation from the actual was the same all
through. oil paintings
With absolute values the painter aims at giving the just note,—the
exact equivalent in value that he finds in nature. He tries to paint up to
out-door light or paint down to in-door light.
Close
Values.—This naturally calls for a fine distinction of tones—the utmost
subtlety of perception of values. To paint a picture in which the highest light
may not be white nor the lowest dark black, and yet give a great range and
variety to the values all through the picture, the values must be close;
must be studied so closely as to take cognizance of the slightest possible
distinction, and to justly express it. This sort of thing was not thought of by
the older painters. It is the distinguishing characteristic of modern painting.
It is a substitution of the study of relationfor the study of
contrast. cheap oil paintings
Study of Values.—You see at once how important, how vital, the study
of values is to painting. Even if you paint with arbitrary lighting, as is still
done by many painters, especially in portraits, you have to consider and study
them as they apply toparts of your picture. You will find no good painter
of old time who did not study relations. If you look at a Velasquez, you will
find that he knew values, even though he did not use the word. painting for sale
But if you are in touch with your century, if you would paint to express the
suggestion you receive from the nature you study, or if you would convey the
idea of truth to the world around you, as that world exists, frankly accepting
the conditions of it, you will have to make the study of values fundamental to
your work. oil paintings for sale
"The
Fourth Dimension."—You study values with your eyes only, but you cannot
measure values. Length, breadth, and thickness you can measure; but
values constitute what might be called a "Fourth Dimension," and you must
measure it by your eye, and without any mechanical aid. Your eye must be trained
to distinguish and judge differences of value.
Helps.—There are, however, several things which you can use to help
you in training your eye to distinguish values. When you look for values you do
not wish to see details nor things, you wish to see only masses and relations.
You must unfocus your eye. The focussed eye sees the fact, and not the
relation. Anything which will help you to see outlines and details less
distinctly will help you to see the values more distinctly.
Half-closed Eyes.—The most common way is to half close the eyes, which
shuts out details, but permits you to see the values. Some painters think this
falsifies pitch, and prefer to keep the eyes wide open, but to focus them on
some pointbeyond the values they are studying. This is not so easy to do
as to half close the eyes, but becomes less difficult with practice. cheap oil paintings
The Blur Glass.—An ordinary magnifying-glass of about 15-inch focus,
which you can get at an optician's for fifteen or twenty cents, will blur the details,
and help you to see the values, because it makes everything vague except the
masses. You can frame it for use by putting it between two pieces of cardboard
with a hole in them, or you can do the same with two pieces of leather sewed
around the edge. Of course the glass itself is all you need, but it will be
easily broken if unprotected. oil paintings for sale
Do not try to look through the glass at your subject, but at
the glass and the image on it.
The Claude Loraine Mirror.—This is a curved mirror with a black
reflecting surface. The object is reflected on it, reduced both in size
and pitch. It concentrates the masses and the color, and so helps to distinguish
the relative values.
You can make a mirror of this sort for yourself by painting the back of a
piece of plate glass black. The real Claude Loraine mirror is expensive. oil painting reproductions for sale
The Common Mirror is also very helpful in distinguishing values. It
reduces the size of things, and reverses the drawing so that you see your
subject under different conditions, and a fresh eye is the result. Place the
group and your painting side by side, if you are painting still life, and look
at both at the same time in the mirror. Do the same with a portrait and the
sitter.
Diminishing Glass.—Much the same effect can be had by using a double
concave lens. The picture is not reversed, but it is reduced, and the details
eliminated.
In using any of these means you must remember that it is always the relations
and not the things you are studying; and the most useful of these aids is the
blur glass, because you cannot possibly see anything in it but the values and
color masses, everything else being blurred. cheap oil paintings
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