The edge is where everything is happening. There are many
ways to control it.
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Brad Marshall’s painting of coral in Maui (unfinished).
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My friend Brad
Marshall is working on a painting of a coral reef right now, and it’s a stellar
example of keeping it soft. He graciously allowed me to use his work here.
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Brad Marshall’s color block-in. He’s soft right from the
start.
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We’ve talked a lot about the
importance of line in painting. Sharp edges with high contrast draw your
attention. But to be effective, they require other passages where edges aren’t as
crisp. In the case of this reef, Brad was seeking a special optical effect of
being underwater, where things are blurry and greenish-blue.
Looking at the screen on which you’re reading this, you’ll
note items in the periphery of your vision. The screen is in focus, but the
items on the edges are blurred. This is how our eyes work—we have a highly
developed cone of vision, and some peripheral vision to keep us oriented. You can take that same principle into your
painting, to direct the eye into looking at what you want it to notice.
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“Painted midground coral (except for that little one in
the crevice. Keeping edges on soft. A little lighter and darker to push it
forward from the background,” said Brad.
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Brad started his painting softly because of the subject. But
it’s also important because the coral at the bottom of the canvas has the
potential to be the strongest draw. It’s lighter in color, and it’s closer to the
viewer. But Brad, being a pro, isn’t going to be suckered into that rookie
mistake. By keeping the painting very soft at the beginning, he is able to
control where and what he concentrates on.
This is a studio painting being built in layers. That gives Brad
ample time to work with thin paint handled wet-on-wet. In addition to his
brushwork, he developed softness by carefully controlling value and hue shifts.
Even in his central motifs he started with an underlying natural blur.
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“Here is a close-up detail. I wanted to give it a soft-focus
look.”
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In oil painting, soft edges can be made by dragging a brush
from one color to another, or painting directly into another color. Oil paints
are absolute champs at blending and softening. So too is watercolor: washes and
wet paper will assure you that edges stay soft until you want them to be
defined.
Gouache and acrylic (correctly applied and not just mimicking
watercolor) are not nearly as useful for blending. However, you can achieve the
same effect of softened edges by employing optical blending.
In fact, since the 19th century, many oil painters (myself
included) have generally eschewed the broad range of blending that oil paints
offer. We’ve been influenced by Impressionism. We use flat blocks of closely
analogous color to get the effect of blending without the brushwork.
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Cliff Rock, Appledore, 1903, Childe Hassam, courtesy
Indianapolis Museum of Art
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Consider the Childe Hassam painting,
above. He used optical blending to create the effect of blurriness that Brad is
getting with brushwork. Note that the top of the rock outcrop is the same value
as the sea. Your eye doesn’t notice the edge any more than it would have had he
blended the edges with a brush.
Hassam used a staggering array of brushwork in his painting
to create a variety of edges. However, none of it was done with traditional
blending. Looked at closely, each color is distinct from its fellows.