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27th July 2023: Dartmoor scenes in Pastels - light & atmosphere with Rebecca de Mendonca
Thanks Chris, for these photos and for the write-up. Rebecca has demonstrated for us before and we were delighted to welcome her back. She brings a wealth of experience including West End and BBC projects. Now based in Exeter, her work has become widely known over recent years for its energy, life and movement. Working predominantly in pastels, she capture likenesses of horses, people, landscapes and architecture, always seeking out the atmosphere and emotion in her subjects. Her fluent and subtle approach working in pastels is the product of her unassuming mastery of her chosen medium. |
For this demo, Rebecca chose a cloudy sunset vista from a rocky tor and worked from a number of reference photos. She often likes to take three photos of a landscape subject, a general view, a sky study, and a foreground picture. This gives a better range of references avoiding bleached out skies on the one hand and impenetrable shadows on the other.
She may also take a snatch of video which can also help capture the 'feel' of a place.
She has the useful habit of recording patches of the pastel colours she uses as this may be useful if further work is needed later.
She may also take a snatch of video which can also help capture the 'feel' of a place.
She has the useful habit of recording patches of the pastel colours she uses as this may be useful if further work is needed later.
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For this demo, Rebecca chose a cloudy sunset vista from a rocky tor and worked from a number of reference photos.
She often likes to take three photos of a landscape subject, a general view, a sky study, and a foreground picture. This gives a better range of references avoiding bleached out skies on the one hand and impenetrable shadows on the other. She may also take a snatch of video which can also help capture the 'feel' of a place. She has the useful habit of recording patches of the pastel colours she uses as this may be useful if further work is needed later. |
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Unlike media such as oils or w/c, of course, with pastels if you haven't got the colour you need you haven't got it. So you have to pick your colours carefully.
Rebecca uses Unison pastels, which now have a large range of colours (currently 380, a snip at £1400!). Even so there will always be missing intermediate shades. However, for a particular landscape a collection of maybe a dozen sticks of colour may be enough. [By the way, there's an interesting video about the Unison 'home' to be seen here ] |
In her second quick picture, Rebecca showed how to blend indistinct distant parts [sky, far hills ...] with the finger. She made the interesting point that distant images are being seen through the sky [i.e. the intervening atmosphere] - hence their blueness. This 'atmospheric perspective' can be as important an element as the pure 'distance perspective ["small - far away"!]
The images below indicate how the effect of rocks is created with some rougher more vigorous marks.
The images below indicate how the effect of rocks is created with some rougher more vigorous marks.
Flaking pastel can be a problem when it comes to framing - especially if one chooses not to use fixative because of its tendency to darken colours - so using a double mount, with a discreet trough to catch fragments, is very helpful. She also tends to knock the picture a bit to knock off any looser fragments before framing. But to avoid the other problem, of adding light tones over a build-up of dark layers of pastel, Rebecca uses a piece of plastic card [e.g. some membership card] to scrape excess pigment away.
She also finds it helpful to use Art Spectrum ColourFix Pastel Primer which gives a useful 'tooth' to a surface to better hold the pigment in place.
While on the subject of materials, Rebecca tends not to make so much use of Conté crayons - harder thinner sticks of pastel colour combined with rather more binder - in her landscapes but uses them a lot more to add details in her pictures of animals etc.
She also finds it helpful to use Art Spectrum ColourFix Pastel Primer which gives a useful 'tooth' to a surface to better hold the pigment in place.
While on the subject of materials, Rebecca tends not to make so much use of Conté crayons - harder thinner sticks of pastel colour combined with rather more binder - in her landscapes but uses them a lot more to add details in her pictures of animals etc.
Anyway, back to that third picture! This was from an image of a sunset over Saddle Tor as seen from Hay Tor. Here we get the gist of the pictures development, I hope. Rather blurry photos, I agree. Sorry.
Half way through ...
And finally, here's one Rebecca made earlier!