I decided to call in the the big guns; watched a bit of Leffel on video.....actually quite a bit. If I was going to do this I wanted a good learning curve; mind you, this is no longer a commission, this guy's mug has become a challenge. Plus I don't take failure well.
My reference, I like the setup - notice his hands and his glasses - my favorite part of this photo
#879 Denny and Tommy 20x24 oil on linen (12-27-13)
(no stage photos)
My original plan was to do the whole shot, but my 20x24 canvas was much too small. I started with the guy on the right, Tommy, he's the one giving me a fit! This was to be a 2-session painting (one day per mug) however I started late on my 1st day and rubbed
out my results which gave me a stained canvas (not my norm).
My absolute favorite passage
The reality is, photos and not always good photos, are part of the this game....A perfect photo could perhaps make a perfect painting, but those are few and far between. I prefer the mundane shot that gives me information and leaves the rest to my own devises. But when we tackle a face...we are expected to catch an absolute likeness. Our nature is to become focused on it and find ourselves over copying our reference...few have enough detail or the right lighting to do it so it becomes flat and labored; not dimensional as it would be if painted from life...as an artist, the trick to working with photos is to imagine it is, and paint it though it were.
Taking Leffel's advice I made a good painting my 1st priority; if I did, the rest would follow.......good advice!
Later....