Monday, 11 October 2010

Inviting a guest colour

This article was first published in my newsletter "Notes From My French Easel" – June 2010. 


I have been thinking about the idea of “guest colour” for a while. For oil painting, I like to use a limited palette: Titanium White (Griffin Alkyd), Cadmium Yellow Pale, Yellow Ochre, Cadmium Red, Alizarin Crimson, Burnt Umber, Cobalt Blue or Cerulean Blue, Ultramarine Blue and Viridian Green.








From time to time, I bring along another colour. This is what I call a “guest colour”. I have several reasons to do that.


  • The first reason is that the particular shade is hard or almost impossible to mix from my usual palette. A good example is Turquoise blue.


  • Another time I would bring a guest colour is when the colour in question is prevalent and, rather than mixing a large quantity of the shade, it is quicker and more productive to use it from the tube.
  • I like some colours so much that they were creeping in all my paintings and they began to look too uniform. For instance, Blue Rex is a great blue shade but also very potent. It works well mixed with background colours to push them further towards the horizon. Another colour I was using too much was Sap Green. It is a nice transparent green which is in the midrange and does not have the acidity of other greens. The risk was that I relied too much on it and forgot that I could mix a broad range of green colours with my basic selection of colours. By making Blue Rex and Sap Green guest colours, I treat them with more judgement.
  • Bringing in a guest colour helps me breaking the routine. Because I only bring one or two guest colours for a given painting, I can take time to know them better and get the best out of them.




2 comments:

  1. I like this idea of a guest color.

    I picked up a tube of turqoise this summer thinking to do a beach painting, but still have not tried it.

    I am rather afaid of it!

    I am so comfortable with my pallet that using another color is outside my comfort zone!

    I look forward to seeing how you treat this "guest!"

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  2. One way to overcome your fear would be to start with your normal palette and introduce the new colour mid-way, when the painting is already well established.

    The most recent painting where I used Turquoise blue was "Morning fog in San Francisco". The veining technique avoided it to be overpowering (see my earlier post Painting in veins).

    Regards,

    Benoit

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