Painting
Painting
Painting
PAINTING
• Painting is the art of applying pigments to
a surface to present a picture of the
subject
• It can also be defined as action of creating
such an artwork
TYPES OF PAINTING ACCORDING
TO SIZE
• Miniatures
• Easel Paintings
• Mural Paintings
Miniatures
– are very small paintings
– it must not be larger than 25 square inches and
the subject must be painted no more than
one-sixth of its actual size
Miniatures
Title
Easel Paintings
• are portable and medium in size
• this painting executed on a portable
support such as a panel or canvas,
instead on a wall
Easel Paintings
Mural Paintings
• are paintings that are usually painted on
walls or other large surfaces such as big
canvasses and ceilings
Mural Paintings
MEDIUMS OF PAINTINGS
• Oil
• Fresco
• Water Color
• Tempera
• Pastel
• Acrylic
• Encaustic
Oil
• oil painting is done with the use of ground
pigments (from minerals, coal tar,
vegetable matter, etc.) mixed with linseed
oil and turpentine or thinner
• many painters prefer oil as a medium
because oil painting are long-lasting, slow
in drying, easy to handle and manipulate
texturally, and capable in being corrected
Oil
Oil
TWO METHODS OF OIL PAINTING
• Direct Method
– the paints are opaque and once they are
applied on the surface, they dry up and give
the finish product its final appearance
• Indirect Method
– the paints are transparent and they are
applied in many thin layers or coatings
Fresco
• fresco (Italian for fresh) painting is done with the
use of earth pigments mixed with water and
applied to fresh plaster or glue which attaches
the color to the surface like a wall
• the biggest advantage of fresco paintings is their
durability
• fresco is an exacting medium because it is quick
to dry so that painter must be a fast worker and
it is difficult to correct
Fresco
Fresco
Water Color
• water color painting is done with the use of
pigments mixed with water and applied to
fine white paper or very thin layers
Water Color
Water Color
Tempera
• tempera painting is done with the use of
ground pigments mixed with an
albuminous or colloidal vehicle (egg yolk,
gum, glue, or casein)
• it is usually done on a wooden panel that
has been made smooth with a coating
plaster
Tempera
Tempera
Pastel
• pastel painting is done with the use of
pastel colors closely resembling dry
pigments bound to form crayons, which
are directly applied to the surface, often
times paper
Pastel
Pastel
Acrylic
• acrylic painting is done with use of
synthetic paints called acrylics mixed with
a vehicle capable of being thinned with
water
• it is the newest and most used by painters
nowadays
• acrylic paint possesses the flexibility of oil
and the transparency and the fast-drying
ability of watercolor
Acrylic
Acrylic
Encaustic
• encaustic painting is done with the use of
hot wax as a vehicle to bind pigments to a
wooden panel or wall
• encaustic is not a popular medium among
painters because it is difficult to
manipulate
Encaustic
Encaustic
PAINTING SUBJECTS
• Portraiture
• Animals and Plants
• Still Life
• Country Life
• Landscape
• Seascape
• City Scape
• Event
• Religious Items
Portraiture
• portraits are picture of men and women
singly or collectively
• before the camera invented, there was no
other means to know the face of a person,
most especially a dead one, but through a
portrait
Portraiture
Animals and Plants
• in the early stages of men’s development
(hunting and food-gathering), this first encounter
were with animals and plants. Because of this
constant contact with and their interest in these
living organism, it was inevitable for them to
paint these things they needed to survive
• some of painters prefer animals and plants,
specially flowering plants as subject for their
paintings
Animals and Plants
Still Life
• still life is the painting of an inanimate object or a
non-living thing placed on a table or another
setting
• a basket of fruits, a bag of groceries, a pack of
cigarettes, a bunch of flowers, and a bucket of
chicken are examples of still life
• the goodness of having a still life as a subject is
its availability and capability to be organized
Still Life
City Life
• painters living in the countryside have
access to scenes happening daily in their
community
• local events such as barrio fiesta, a
bountiful rice harvest, a big catch of fishes,
and a natural calamity are exciting painting
subjects
City Life
Landscape
• any of the land forms can be subject of a
landscape painting
• this land forms include the volcano , the
mountain, the hill, the valley, and the cliff,
etc.
Landscape
Seascape
• any of the water forms can be the subject
of a seascape painting
• these water forms include the ocean the
sea, the river, the lake, the brook, the
pond, and the falls, etc.
Seascape
Cityscape
• an aerial view of city or a portion of it can
be the subject of a cityscape painting
Cityscape
Event
• events are among the favorite subjects of
painters
Event
Religious Items
• religious items such as the Holy Family,
Madonna and Child, Jesus Christ, angels,
saints, and religious objects are as
commonly used subjects today as they
were during the medieval and renaissance
Periods
Religious Items
Tools in Painting
• Brush - used to have a variety of strokes
• Palette - contains or holds the painting
medium
• Palette knife or spatula - used to mix
colors on the palette, and sometimes to
add colors and to scrape or remove colors
from the painting surface
• Easel - frame that supports the painting
Tools
Toolsin
in Painting
Painting
Brush Pallete
Spatula Easel
History of Painting
• Prehistoric Period
– Spans al cultures and dates back to the time
of the prehistoric men who produced their
own artifacts
– Ancient Egyptians created paintings to make
the burial site, like the pyramid for the dead
pharaoh.
History of Painting
Grotte Vhauvet
History of Painting
Maestà of Duccio
History of Painting
• Rennaisance Period (14th to mid-17th
century)
– Golden age of painting
– Reflected the revolution of ideas and science
History of Painting
Alethea Talbot with her Husband by Peter Infanta Margarita Teresa in a Pink Dress
Paul Rubens by Diego Velazquez
History of Painting
• Classic Period (18th Century)
– Emerged an art style that revived the
Classical art of Greece and Rome in painting,
sculpture, and architecture
– Any art that baed on caregully organized
arrangement of parts, with special emphasis
on balance and proportion
History
History of Painting
of Painting
Crossing the Alps by Jacques Louis David Aurora and Cephalus by Pierre-Narcisse Guerin
– was a 20th-century Filipino painter known for his Cubist-inspired paintings. Most
often depicting nude women, interiors, still lifes, and landscapes, Alcuaz’s work is
characterized by its soft blurred edges coupled with bold lines and shapes.
– He is known mainly for his gestural paintings in acrylic and oil, as well as
sketches in ink, watercolor and pencil.
– National Artist for Visual Arts, Painting, Sculpture and Mixed Media in 2009.
– He has held exhibits at leading galleries in the Philippines, Spain, Portugal,
Singapore, United States, Germany and Poland.
– Among his numerous awards are the first prize at the Premio Moncada (1957)
and the Prix Francisco Goya (1958) in Barcelona.
Famous Work
La Familia Sabel
Domingo, Damian (1796-1834)
• First Filipino painter who specialized in secular pinting.
• He portrayed non-religious themes on canvas and
excelled in miniature painting.
• He was considered a forerunner of the Filipino
Movement for racial equality and the foremost Filpino
painter of the early 19th century.
• Among a few of his works which survive to prove his
mettle in the visual arts are “Nuestra Senora del Rosario”
“Catedra de San Pedro Roma” (“ The Seat of Saint
Peter”), “La Sagrada Familia” (The Holy Family) and “La
Imaculada Conception” (The Immaculate Conception).
Famous Work
“The Builders”
Blood Compact
The Annunciation
Mona Lisa
Race Horses
Blind Guitarist
Self-Portrait
Kandinsky, Wassily
• (December 4, 1866 – December 13, 1944)
• Russian painter, printmaker, art theorist
• One of the Most Famous 20th Century
Artist
Famous Works
A Conglomerate At Rest
Manet, Edouard
• (1832 – 1883)
• Realist
• Inspired by the work of Giorgione entitled
“Open-Air Concert”
Famous Works
Olympia
Matisse, Henri
• (December 31, 1869 – November 3, 1954)
• French painter, sculptor, printmaker and
draftsman
• Considered as one of the best-known 20th
century artist
• Initially labelled as Fauve (wild beast)
• Upholder of the classical tradition in
French painting
Famous Works
Notre-Dame
The Open Window
Monet, Claude
• (November 14, 1840 – December 5, 1926)
• Founder of French impressionist painting
• Most Consistent and Prolific Practitioner of
the movements’ philosophy of expressing
one’s perceptions before nature
Famous Works
Bathers at La Grenouillere
Munch, Edward
• ( December 12, 1863 – January 23, 1944)\
• Norwegian symbolist painter, printmaker
and important forerunner of expressionistic
art
Famous Works
Vincent