How
to Paint Abstract Art - There
are many ways as to enter the world of expressing oneself through abstract art
.... I came across this wonderful piece from Today's Women and felt even as a
teacher of art, I couldn't have written it better, Lynne approaches her journey
similar as my self, the use of music. I also get inspired by poetry and of course
nature itself. All who wish to or are working in absract art, should read the
words of Kandinsky, Klee, Miro and Hans Hofmann. Read and study all the great
masters of the past as well as the present .... Shane. Soutce:
Today's Woman, By Lynne Taetzsch If
you’ve always wanted to make an abstract painting but didn’t know where to begin,
here are several ideas to get you started. How to move from realism to abstraction,
express your emotions, and utilize music to facilitate the process of making abstract
art.
Do you want to create abstract art, but feel that you don't know
where to begin? Here are some ideas to get you started: Begin traditionally
by copying from life and gradually move into abstraction. When I was young, I
drew and painted portraits, still lifes, and landscapes. Sometimes I copied from
a photograph or a reproduction of someone else's art. The goal at that time was
to represent what I saw as closely as possible. It wasn't until my late teens
that I began to "abstract" or move away from reality. I still began with a subject,
but I did not feel bound to represent it, only to use it as a starting-off point
for my own purposes. All art is abstract in the sense that it is
not the object itself. Many who call themselves "abstract artists" are indeed
painting a subject, but freely stylizing that subject. If you want to paint "abstract"
but have trouble figuring out how to approach the canvas, try taking a subject
you have painted before and abstracting it. If you are painting
from life, for example, try squinting your eyes until all you can see are the
blurry outlines of your subject. Forget the details. Take your brush or pencil
and sketch in the broad shapes and contours. Or take a very small section of your
subject and blow it up to cover the whole canvas. Now stand back
and see how your composition unfolds, how the shapes take form and become interesting
in and of themselves, without reference to your subject. Keep playing with your
composition, adding and subtracting shapes, modifying color, strengthening lines.
Follow what draws you in, scrap what doesn't. Work fast, and then stop and study
what you have. Another way to begin to paint abstract art is to use
your emotions to get you started. Listening to music is one way I enhance my emotions
when I paint. Sometimes I choose music to reflect my current mood: new age, jazz
or classical for reflective moods, rock for strong, driving emotions, and so forth.
Sometimes a particular mood develops as I listen to and empathize with the lyrics
of a song. Music's rhythm and tempo can also have an influence on
the quality and speed with which you apply a paintbrush or palette knife to the
canvas. How you apply the paint will be reflected in the result, leaving a trace
of the musical rhythm you were listening to as you made it. Try
this experiment: think of yourself as an instrument or tool of the music in your
head. Relax and let the music select colors, control the movement of your hands,
and create the content. Aside from music, emotion itself can drive
the painting process. Non-representational art is the best way to directly express
emotion because it isn't constrained by attempting to be "true" to a particular
subject matter. If you wake up mad at the world, you can paint a jagged swath
of red across the canvas, directly expressing your anger. Color, line, form--everything
in your painter's arsenal is available to say exactly how you are feeling.
One day when I was in a particularly dark mood, I kept feeling "bloody
secret" as I painted. Yet I wanted this feeling to be both exposed and hidden
at the same time. The result was a painting I titled, "Tied in a Bow." I painted
the bloody secret in thick red paint in the center of the canvas, but I tied it
in a bow and framed it prettily in pink. Thus, the blood was there, but it was
my secret. If you are feeling a strong emotion of any kind, try
expressing it directly through color, line and form on the canvas. But remember
that whatever method you use to begin an abstract painting, you’ll need to pay
attention to composition, interest, energy, and focus in order to complete it
successfully. About
the Author Lynne
Taetzsch is an artist and writer whose contemporary abstract paintings have been
exhibited throughout the world. Lynne writes extensively on art in her blog and
works out of her studio in Ithaca, New York. See her dynamic and widely-acclaimed
art at Artbylt.Com. |