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"Cascade" (c) Susan Bertke 2011 |
Whether I'm working in watercolor, acrylic, pastel, or some other medium, I invite you to look over my shoulder as I force myself into my studio and battle the gremlin of self criticism.
Thursday, February 9, 2012
Cascade
Here is the finished version of "Cascade." As you can see, it's come a long way since the underpainting was done.
Saturday, December 10, 2011
Rocks! Waterfall! (Work in progress)
Now that I've had my floral break, I'm back to working on another rocks and waterfall painting. This one is a conglomerate of two shots I took somewhere out west -- Yellowstone, maybe. It's about half done, and I'm chipping away at it during the Tuesday afternoon watercolor class I teach in Kettering, Ohio.
I started this with the intention of doing a pen and ink drawing, then over-painting with watercolor. That idea lasted through the first session, and you can see evidence of this beginning in a couple sections. During the second session, I laid in the sky and distant background. Last Tuesday I worked on the rocks on the middle and lower right, and I started indicating the flow of the water.
If you're interested in technique, you can see where I've used coarse table salt in the rocks on the lower right. It gives some interesting texture, though I'll probably paint over some of it. It would look too odd to have it only in that one section of the painting.
Keep watching this blog, and you'll see how the painting develops.
I started this with the intention of doing a pen and ink drawing, then over-painting with watercolor. That idea lasted through the first session, and you can see evidence of this beginning in a couple sections. During the second session, I laid in the sky and distant background. Last Tuesday I worked on the rocks on the middle and lower right, and I started indicating the flow of the water.
If you're interested in technique, you can see where I've used coarse table salt in the rocks on the lower right. It gives some interesting texture, though I'll probably paint over some of it. It would look too odd to have it only in that one section of the painting.
Keep watching this blog, and you'll see how the painting develops.
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Thursday, November 3, 2011
Rocky Stream: Finished!
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"Rocky Stream" c2011 Susan Bertke |
After spending an afternoon fiddling with the little details, I've declared this painting finished!
Unlike the other paintings I've been working on the last couple of months, this one is pure transparent watercolor. The technique has been heavy on dry brushing to get textures and shadows. That's a very careful, tedious way to keep control of watercolor. Except for the very first wash, there was very little wet-into-wet painting in this one.
I've finally identified the reference photo as one I took from the back of a motel just outside of Yosemite National Bank.
Saturday, October 29, 2011
Stream: Work in Progress #2
I've been fiddling with this painting since I posted the first stage in September. If you compare the two, you'll see that I've added another layer of shadow on many of the foreground rocks. I've also given more definition to the trees on the left and added softer definition to the more distant trees on the top right.
Unlike the previous two paintings, this work is pure transparent watercolor, since I'm using it as a demo painting for my Tuesday afternoon watercolor class in Kettering. I'm in no hurry to finish, and I think it's about 85% there. I mostly want to work in the lower left quarter. The little bit of white water needs to be detailed, and some fine detail added to the rocks immediately around it.
Anyone see anything else I should do to it? Comments welcome!
Unlike the previous two paintings, this work is pure transparent watercolor, since I'm using it as a demo painting for my Tuesday afternoon watercolor class in Kettering. I'm in no hurry to finish, and I think it's about 85% there. I mostly want to work in the lower left quarter. The little bit of white water needs to be detailed, and some fine detail added to the rocks immediately around it.
Anyone see anything else I should do to it? Comments welcome!
Friday, October 28, 2011
Cedar Falls -- Completed?
You saw the beginning stages of this watercolor on September 2nd. I think it's finally finished. (Or as "finished" was my paintings ever are. The longer they sit around my studio, the more likely I am to go back and fiddle with them.)
That dadgum waterfall has been driving me crazy since my last post. I can't tell you how many variations I've painted. Watercolor purists maintain that the only white in the painting should be the original white of the paper. Early on, it became clear that this would not be a pure transparent watercolor. I ended up overworking fairly extensively with gouache (opaque watercolor).
The trick to combining transparent and opaque watercolor is to do so in a way that seems intentional. It should look like the opaque bits were intended from the beginning, not desperate attempts to cover up mistakes. Since I took Chris Leeper's workshop, I've been a lot more relaxed about the idea of mixing watercolor with either acrylic or gouache. It's helped my transparent work, I think, because I'm a lot more relaxed in the beginning stages of a painting. I think, "Oh, I can be a little more adventurous about my colors, because I can always use this as an underpainting if I don't like the result."
The finished size is about 14"x20" on Arches 140-lb. watercolor paper.
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Cedar Falls (c) 2011 Susan Bertke |
That dadgum waterfall has been driving me crazy since my last post. I can't tell you how many variations I've painted. Watercolor purists maintain that the only white in the painting should be the original white of the paper. Early on, it became clear that this would not be a pure transparent watercolor. I ended up overworking fairly extensively with gouache (opaque watercolor).
The trick to combining transparent and opaque watercolor is to do so in a way that seems intentional. It should look like the opaque bits were intended from the beginning, not desperate attempts to cover up mistakes. Since I took Chris Leeper's workshop, I've been a lot more relaxed about the idea of mixing watercolor with either acrylic or gouache. It's helped my transparent work, I think, because I'm a lot more relaxed in the beginning stages of a painting. I think, "Oh, I can be a little more adventurous about my colors, because I can always use this as an underpainting if I don't like the result."
The finished size is about 14"x20" on Arches 140-lb. watercolor paper.
Thursday, October 27, 2011
Braided Stream
Here's the completed version of "Braided Stream." (If you look at my previous post, you'll see the underpainting.)
The background hills gave me the most grief in this painting. I vowed I was going to keep them a bit out of focus so the center of interest would stay in the foreground. But I went back to make "just a few corrections," and the next thing I knew I was painting individual branches on trees! So then I had to go back and paint over most of that detail. :-)
I'm happy with the texture I got in the foreground, especially all the gravel and stones. And the bark of the trees came out nice, too. The really tricky part was the water, or rather showing the mud and stones under the surface of the water.
The painting is done in acrylic on Arches 140-lb. watercolor paper, 14"x20".
Leave a comment and let me know what you think.
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Braided Stream (c) 2011 Susan Bertke |
The background hills gave me the most grief in this painting. I vowed I was going to keep them a bit out of focus so the center of interest would stay in the foreground. But I went back to make "just a few corrections," and the next thing I knew I was painting individual branches on trees! So then I had to go back and paint over most of that detail. :-)
I'm happy with the texture I got in the foreground, especially all the gravel and stones. And the bark of the trees came out nice, too. The really tricky part was the water, or rather showing the mud and stones under the surface of the water.
The painting is done in acrylic on Arches 140-lb. watercolor paper, 14"x20".
Leave a comment and let me know what you think.
Monday, October 17, 2011
Braided Stream - Work in Progress
I started this painting during the Brown Bagger session last Monday and haven't done a thing with it since then. It's acrylic on paper, and definitely is just the beginning step. Watch here for future progress...
Thursday, October 6, 2011
"Summer Woods"
"Summer Woods" by Susan Bertke (c) 2011 |
- I'm not crazy about the woven texture of canvas, especially when I'm working with thin glazes. And watercolor paper comes in three different finishes (hot-press, cold-press, and rough).
- It gives me the option of starting the painting with watercolor or acrylic thinned to the consistency of watercolor -- which gives a transparency and luminosity that I haven't achieved with opaque media.
- I have more framing options:
- Under glass with a mat (I'm not sure that having the glass in direct contact with the acrylic paint would be a good idea.) in a standard frame (not necessarily a canvas-deep frame).
- Framed with neither glass nor mat, so it looks more like a canvas work.
- Dry-mounted to a support of some sort and hung without any frame at all. (I haven't tried this, but I'm sure someone has.) Chris Leeper actually mounts his paper to a board before he starts working.
Anyway, this painting is acrylic on Arches 140-lb cold-press watercolor paper, 14" x 20".
Monday, October 3, 2011
Name This Painting!
Monday, September 26, 2011
Yet another stream, closer to home: Work in Progress
I've started meeting with a group of "brown-baggers" once a week at Rosewood Art Centre in Kettering, OH. It's a very informal sort of class, and it is forcing me back into the studio. Since Jennifer works in acrylic, I've dug out my old paints and have been trying to recover my long forgotten brushwork skills. At first, everything felt very awkward and frustrating, but I felt like it was starting to come together for me with this painting.
The bottom quarter is mostly underpainting. I'm happy with the upper left quarter. The upper right corner is totally screwed up. In short, it's at a fairly typical stage of development with areas I like and areas I dislike. More work to be done...
This work is acrylic on canvas board, 18x24 inches. Oh, yeah, the reference photo was taken from Old Man's Cave in Hocking Hills State Park, Ohio. The instructor for the Brown Baggers is J. Austin Jennings http://2-artists.com/JAJ.htm
The bottom quarter is mostly underpainting. I'm happy with the upper left quarter. The upper right corner is totally screwed up. In short, it's at a fairly typical stage of development with areas I like and areas I dislike. More work to be done...
This work is acrylic on canvas board, 18x24 inches. Oh, yeah, the reference photo was taken from Old Man's Cave in Hocking Hills State Park, Ohio. The instructor for the Brown Baggers is J. Austin Jennings http://2-artists.com/JAJ.htm
Another Stream: Work in Progress
I'm still mining my stash of vacation photographs. I think the source photo for this painting was taken somewhere in Colorado, probably in the Keystone area, though it's the sort of picture that could have been snapped almost anywhere.
I'm working in transparent watercolor on a half sheet of Arches 140lb cold pressed paper. I want to keep the colors fresh, so I'm being a bit more cautious than usual with my washes.
I'd say this painting is about half done. It's mostly still underpainting.
I'm working in transparent watercolor on a half sheet of Arches 140lb cold pressed paper. I want to keep the colors fresh, so I'm being a bit more cautious than usual with my washes.
I'd say this painting is about half done. It's mostly still underpainting.
Friday, September 2, 2011
Work in Progress: Cedar Falls
Cedar Falls (WIP) Copyright Susan Bertke, 2011 |
This is a case where I have to let the painting hang for a while until I see the solution to the problems. If any of you have suggestions, I'm always interested in your feedback!
Monday, May 23, 2011
Thursday, May 19, 2011
At Chris Leeper's Workshop
This was day three at Christopher Leeper's watermedia workshop in Kettering, Ohio. (Go to Chris' web site.)
This is the first painting I did, Liquid Gold. It's done on a quarter sheet of Arches cold-pressed 140# watercolor paper. I began with an underpainting of transparent watercolor, then an overpainting of gouache (opaque watercolor). I was trying to capture the moment near sunset when the light hits that cliff and reflects into the stream. The water turns to molten gold, and my camera was totally unable to fully capture the effect. This is close. Reference photo was taken just outside of Yosemite National Park.
This second painting is from a photo taken at Hocking Hills in southeast Ohio. Feeling a little braver, I worked on a half sheet of Arches CP 140# paper. This time I started with transparent watercolor and overpainted with acrylics.
I'm trying to be bolder and more creative with my use of color and to loosen up my brushwork.
It's not really complete yet -- about 90% there.
(I'm unhappy that my husband's camera time stamped my photos. I'll have to figure how to turn that feature off!)
This is the first painting I did, Liquid Gold. It's done on a quarter sheet of Arches cold-pressed 140# watercolor paper. I began with an underpainting of transparent watercolor, then an overpainting of gouache (opaque watercolor). I was trying to capture the moment near sunset when the light hits that cliff and reflects into the stream. The water turns to molten gold, and my camera was totally unable to fully capture the effect. This is close. Reference photo was taken just outside of Yosemite National Park.
This second painting is from a photo taken at Hocking Hills in southeast Ohio. Feeling a little braver, I worked on a half sheet of Arches CP 140# paper. This time I started with transparent watercolor and overpainted with acrylics.
I'm trying to be bolder and more creative with my use of color and to loosen up my brushwork.
It's not really complete yet -- about 90% there.
(I'm unhappy that my husband's camera time stamped my photos. I'll have to figure how to turn that feature off!)
Tuesday, May 3, 2011
Little Rose
This little painting is about 4x6-inches on Lanaquarelle CP paper.
The rose is from a photo reference, but the leaves were an exercise in negative painting and came out of my head.
The rose is from a photo reference, but the leaves were an exercise in negative painting and came out of my head.
Tuesday, April 26, 2011
Checking out my Blogger stats
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Commissioned portrait in pastel, (c) Susan Bertke |
So a big thank you to all those who have checked out the site. I hope you enjoyed it and will come back. Please feel free to follow and/or subscribe so you don't miss anything. And leave a comment just to say hello!
I think I'll share something I did many years ago for a loyal client. Every time Ginny gets a new dog, she has me do its pastel portrait...
Susan
Sunday, April 24, 2011
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Work in Progress: Hocking Hills Version 2

Sadly, I think I've lost the feeling of light at the end of the path, and the woods now just looks murky to me. The shadow under the middle clump of foliage on the left looks too straight and too exactly aligned with the shadow above it.
Time to set this aside and let it simmer for a while.
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Work in Progress: Hocking Hills
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