
Sunday, November 22, 2009
Wash Painting: In Praise Of Happy Accidents
This post is just the tip of the iceberg... see reason number 8 on our The Top Ten Reasons To Support The A-HAA for links to more great art instruction posts.

Archive supporter, Mike Fontanelli brought by a stack of mid-1930s Colliers magazines for us to digitize. Colliers was the "Rolls Royce" of weekly magazines for many years, employing some of the greatest illustrators in the business. (Check out our previous postings of mid 1930s and late 40s issues, as well as our posts on Lawson Wood and Earl Oliver Hurst.) In browsing through page after page of beautiful wash paintings, I was struck by how rare it is to see illustrations like this any more. That's just plain wrong.

In our digital age, programs like Photoshop have replaced brush and pen. But Photoshop doesn't come close to the flexibility and variety that water painting can provide. And in the hands of an experienced artist, a brush can knock out a finished painting much faster than with a computer. It just takes advance planning, concentration and an experienced hand.

Look at the beautiful compositions in these examples. The artists were working from a carefully constructed drawing, and they worked out every detail before paint touched paper. The light source and the value scale are precisely controlled to make the image "mesh" in your eye. There's no wasted effort or extraneous detail. The paintings themselves were executed very quickly.

That's the exact opposite of the way that a digital image is created. Instead of making all the creative decisions up front, the digital artist makes those decisions as he paints. In Photoshop, it's typical to build up the illustration in layers, stacking up planes that can be shifted around as needed. The composition evolves, created in sections and joined with blurred seams to connect them. This evolutionary process may result in an image that is acceptably complex, but it doesn't lend itself to creating a strong or unified statement.

Contrast that with these beautiful wash paintings... The overall composition reads no matter how small you make it, and there's a lot of variety between sharp details (in the faces and hands) and loose brushwork (in the fabric and backgrounds). This keeps your eye focused on the important part of the composition. But there's an even bigger difference... Even when enlarged many times, these paintings still look good because of what watercolor painters refer to as the "happy accidents". Any digital anomaly or seam between layers in a Photoshop image will stand out like a sore thumb, but a loose brush stroke, a bit of paper peeking through the dry brush, or a bleeding bit of pigment can look beautiful. The accidents are natural looking.




All of the images you see here come from two issues of Colliers from 1934. Every week, the staff artists had to quickly produce striking images to accompany the articles. Speed was of the essence. Wash painting was a quick and beautiful solution.

One week, an artist might be illustrating a romance...

The next week a Western adventure...

The technique lent itself to both realistic depiction and cartoony stylization.

If you haven't checked them out yet, make sure to take a look at our previous posts on mid 30s Colliers illustrations and late 40s Colliers. There's a wealth of great images in old magazines like this.

Many thanks to Mike Fontanelli for sharing these with us. He has a stack of Colliers with Earl Oliver Hurst covers that he will be bringing by soon. I can't wait to see those.


I figured there might be a few of you out there who will be sitting at home with your belly full of turkey this week needing a diversion... a project to sharpen your art skills. Here's a lesson from the fabulous Famous Artists Course. Pull out your brushes and some lamp black and give it a try. Have fun!
FAMOUS ARTISTS ON WASH PAINTING PART ONE: The Fundamentals Of Wash Painting






FAMOUS ARTISTS ON WASH PAINTING PART TWO: Step By Step Through Paintings By Dohanos and Whitcomb








One last thing... Often when people speak of transparent water colors in animation, they refer to it as an "old fashioned" technique...

But there's nothing old fashioned about watercolor painting. Check out the great watercolors by Archive supporter William K. Moore...

Bill paints people he finds on the streets in Bogota, Columbia. Browse through his blog and be amazed at his keen observation and boundless imagination. This man paints a painting every day of his life! That makes him a hero in my book.
If you enjoyed this post, see... Mid 30s Colliers Illustrations, Late 40s Colliers, Lawson Wood: The Monkey Artist, Complete Guide To Cartooning On Magazine Cartoons Part One and Part Two.
Also check out these lessons from the Famous Artists Course... Chad's Design For Television, Willard Mullin on Drawing Animals, Fundamentals of Composition Part One and Part Two.
Stephen Worth
Director
ASIFA-Hollywood
Animation Archive
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2 Comments:
Absolutely amazing, thank you!
Unbelievable! This is the "Citzen Kane" of art posts. I'm going to go back and read it again!
Thanks to Steve and Mike!
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