Exercise: Making your own forms
Waste some paper on this. Draw some forms that you have been taught (such as a house, an apple, a tree, a person.) Now make some forms of your own. (Don’t try to be perfect.) For instance, make a vase, a window, a hand, a dog. Now go look at these and other forms. Now show your drawings to someone and ask what they remind them of.
Hard and Soft Edges:
Forms exist in space and often, the depiction of a form on a flat canvas is the first step towards creating the illusion of space. Here is where you need to start to observe carefully the use of contrast and line to create edges. A hard edge (created with a lot of contrast or a hard dark line) makes an object appear crisp. But a soft edge is particularly helpful in creating the illusion of a round object. Also, hard edges seem to come forward while soft edges recede, increasing the illusion of depth.
Exercise: form (monochrome)
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Basic or home value
There’s another aspect of value that is helpful in starting a painting. Some refer to it as “home value” or basic value. It’s easiest to see if you look at an object that is all one basic color or value, like a cup. When you shine a light on it from a direction, parts of the object become darker and lighter. An approach to the object is to first establish the “home value” and then to lighten and darken the object (and, of course, the space around the object) according to the direction of the light source.
Exercise:
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