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Doubt of a Shadow
// Artist Daily
Oil Painting Elements--The Shadow
Shadows are very important in defining the form of any object, but they are often the least understood and most difficult element to master in painting. Most importantly, shadows must have transparency, or light in them, to be effective. Going by the old rule, "warm light casts cool shadows; cool light casts warm shadows", is a good start but doesn't fit every situation and may be dangerous to rely on. It is far more accurately stated this way: "warm light generally casts cooler shadows and cool light generally casts warmer shadows. What is important is seeing accurately and understanding what is before us and why.
Fontainebleau Forest by Claude Monet, 1865. |
Look at Fontainebleau Forest by Monet to see this principle in action and his solution to the problem. In this case, the warm sunlight is also filtered through a green canopy, which colors some of the light before it hits the ground, complicating matters. Monet's handling of the shadows underneath the trees is very sensitive and sophisticated. There are both warms and cools!
In the watercolor, Corfu: Lights and Shadows, John Singer Sargent chose to make the shadows the main subject of the painting. Corfu is a Greek island in the Ionian sea, bathed in very warm summer light. Sargent observed both warm shadows and cool shadows on the same building, cast by the same trees.
Corfu: Lights and Shadows |
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--John and Ann
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