One of the assets of this blog - which started 20 years ago - is there is a very considerable archive of past posts - some of which have been very popular indeed.
I've just come across a post which highlights what were the 10 most popular posts in 2011 - after the first five years of Making A Mark.
During this period I did regular "big projects" on specific topics - and these are reflected in the most popular posts
Below are the top five posts - with the links to each blog post embedded in its title.Tomorrow I'll list the next 5 posts in the top 10
I've extracted a short piece of text and an image from each one - so you can get an insight as to what the post is about.
CAUTION: Given the age of the posts some of the links embedded in the post will no longer work as websites have died and been wound up.
1. 10 Tips for How to Sketch People
Drawing and sketching people is an invaluable way of developing a wide range of artistic skills.
I've been drawing people for very many years - family, friends, people in cafes and restaurants, life class models - and other artists. People often tell me how much they like the sketches I make of people I come across on my travels with a sketchbook - which I find a bit odd as most rarely have faces!
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| Cheers Boston! (sketching fellow travellers at Logan Airport, Boston, USA September 2006) 8" x 10", pen and sepia ink and coloured pencils copyright Katherine Tyrrell |
2. Van Gogh: Drawing media and techniques
Drawing Media:
- Pencil: He employed pencil for preliminary drawings and then combined it with ink. He often worked with a carpenter's pencil. He liked to press hard and often worked on wet paper.
- Pen and ink: Van Gogh had a remarkable gift for pen drawing and graphic technique.
- Most of Van Gogh's pen and ink and brush drawings (such as the one above) are executed first in pencil first. He then inks/bruhes over the pencil marks once he is happy with them.
- some of his pen and ink drawings are drawn without any preliminary use of pencil
- During his visit to Arles in 1888, Van Gogh discovered the reed pen (made from local hollow-barreled grass, sharpened with a penknife). It changed his drawing style. He created some extraordinary drawings of the Provençal landscape, including a series of drawings of and from Montmajour (east of Arles) , in reed pen and aniline ink on laid paper. The ink has now faded to a dull brown.
- The Van Gogh Museum is conducting research into pigments and drawing inks in use in the period 1888-1890 and comparing this to the inks Van Gogh used [UPDATE: See the Research Results REVIGO: Paintings - which also comments on inks]
3. Composition - Principles of Design
This post forms part of an introduction to the elements and principles of composition and design and follows on from yesterday's post about the elements of design.It's an overview. More can be written about each and every principle - and has been!
- Good composition doesn't happen by accident. A quick reminder. The analogy which I find helpful for remembering which is which is to compare the elements and principles of art and design to the ingredients and method of a recipe. Cookery and composition have quite a lot in common!
- All the elements are ingredients - they are separate and need to be combined effectively to produce a successful outcome. Each ingredient gets to play a major or a minor role in the eventual outcome. This, in part, is dependent on the quantities employed and, in part, on the nature and intrinsic power of each ingredient (think garlic and chilis!).
- It's the particular way that they they are combined - using the principles of design - which enables a successful outcome. The same ingredients can for example be combined in a number of different ways (think of recipes for eggs!)
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| Mr and Mrs Andrews (about 1750) by Thomas Gainsborough (1727 - 1788) oil on canvas, 69.8 x 119.4cm National Gallery, London |
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- and want to keep up with my reviews
and get an email to your inbox every time I publish
4. Composition - The Elements of Design
Value
Value - An element of art that refers to luminance or luminosity — the lightness or darkness of a color. Value is an especially important element in works of art when color is absent. This is particularly likely with drawings, woodcuts, lithographs, and photographs. It is also true with most sculpture and architecture.
ArtLex: Value
Values in two dimensional artwork create gradations in light and contrast - and without these everything would be flat. Values can be created in different ways - by line and by colour.
To my mind, value is the most important element in the design of a painting. Without values there is no design. It's more important than colour because there are great works of art which have no colour and value can be a component of colour but colour isn't a component of value per se.
To my mind, value is the most important element in the design of a painting. Without values there is no design. It's more important than colour because there are great works of art which have no colour and value can be a component of colour but colour isn't a component of value per se.
"The first things to study are form and values. For me, these are the things that are the basics of what is serious in art. Color and finish put charm in one's work."
Jean Baptiste Corot (1796-1875), French painter. Keith Roberts, Corot, 1965.
5. Colour Schemes: Split Complementaries, Triads and Tetrads
Colour schemes are not just for interior designers, they also help visual artists to achieve unity, harmony as well as contrast and impact in the design and composition of paintings. I've already highlighted the characteristics of complementary colours and analogous colours and in this post I'll be highlighting three other colour schemes which are often used by professional artists:- Split Complementary - a colour plus the two colours either side of its complementary colour (the isosceles triangle shape on the Color Wheel above
- Triad - any three colours which are equidistant on the colour wheel
- Tetrad - any four colours which are equidistant on the colour wheel
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| The Pocket Colour Wheel copyright The Colour Wheel Company |
Tomorrow, I'll be posting about
- What is a still life?
- The influence of Japanese Art
- Which sketchbook?
- Flowers in Art... and Charles Rennie Mackintosh
- Major Art Competitions in the UK 2011 - a timetable





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