I See Tris in You
Only once the painting was complete did I see the resemblance to Tris of Insurgent. In reality our model is the same age and has similar coloring;however, I believe the bright light led to the parallels to Tris.
I am very happy with this painting as I have been studying portrait drawing and features. I do not want to create generic faces or features. An artist mentor recently said that eyebrows and asymmetry ("the little things") do make a difference. That thought was in my mind as I studied our model's eyebrows, curve of nose and corner of mouth.
Intentionally, I chose a smaller canvas (9x12) so that I would not be distracted by extraneous information. My model time is limited to a few hours and I really had to focus.
The model's hair is tied up and goes off the top of the canvas, the front pieces reflected the blue light brilliantly. Dark brown hair was being hit with direct light and it glowed almost white the way the light hit.
"What can I leave out?" I've learned is a question that is as important as "what do I put in?" Here I only imply the eyes as all I could see was the dark downcast lashes - no eyeball, no whites of eyes. Still, the viewer knows the eyes are downcast...
I have also been working on jawline. The darkness under the chin and the curve up toward the ear are important and width and curve matter. I feel that I captured the size and width accurately.
Note the light hitting the top of eyebrow, the eyelid, the nose, the lower lip and the chin. Such bright blueish light on the face meant that the shadow side was warm and deep. Much of her right cheek (facing her) is in shadow as is her top lip and part of chin.
I have captured something here and am pleased with the outcome of this face study.
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