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The following is from the book: MAKE YOUR WATERCOLORS LOOK PROFESSIONAL,
"Linda L. Moyer Shows You How To... Create Light With Layers," North Light
Books, Cincinnati, Ohio, 1995, pp. 73-75.
Linda Stevens Moyer
uses an extensive layering process in painting. She stacks many layers
of transparent pigments on top of each other until the desired hue, value
and intensity are achieved. "I have found that the depiction of light
is better simulated in this indirect way than by directly mixing and applying
color in fewer steps," says Stevens.
To create light, she works on the theory that "luminosity can be achieved
by contrasting the three properties of color: value, intensity and hue.
In sections of a painting that I want to be luminous, I make it lighter,
brighter and complementary to the rest of the painting."
Use
Three Basic Elements to Enhance the Light
- Value. Lightness
can be emphasized by putting darker colors around it.
- Intensity. Make
colors outside the area of interest appear duller by mixing complementary
color into them to gray them.
- Hue. Surround
the focal point with complementary colors, to make the whole area appear
more brilliant in color.
Stevens says, "The
light is the difference between a subject that works and a subject that
doesn't. There's a magic in how light hits an object. Especially in early
morning and late afternoon, there is a magical quality in the warmth of
the light and the cast shadows."
Establish
a Center of Interest
"Most of the time,"
says Stevens, "my center of interest is the lightest area of the composition.
I add subordinate light areas to help move the viewer's eye to the focal
point either by the value or the direction of light flowing across that
shape. The shapes of light and shadow get even more weight than the shapes
of the objects."

1. Working on Arches 300-pound rough paper, Stevens lightly draws the
image with pencil. Since she develops her colors and values with many
layers of mostly primary colors, she begins with the warmest and most
opaque--Cadmium Yellow Pale and orange. She places these wherever they
will be needed in the finished painting or wherever they will be needed
to influence another color (such as yellow green).
2. She adds a third warm color,Alizarin Crimson. You can see that the
layering is not only developing color. but is also creating a range of
values.

3. By washing transparent green over the previous colors, Stevens gets
a wonderful range of greens in the foliage.

4 . Adding layers of blues makes the cooler, darker areas of the background
begin to recede.

5. The final step is adding a dark, dull blue-green (Winsor Blue, Ultramarine
Blue, Alizarin Crimson and Burnt Sienna) to intensify the darkest values.
Haiku
#21
Linda Stevens Moyer,
25"x 18"
Using Light to Create a Mood
Stevens
also uses light to create a mood. If she wants the painting to have a
light, lyrical look, she keeps all the values close to each other in the
light to middle value range. If she wants more drama, she uses greater
value contrast. However, she says, "Most of my paintings go from white
to almost black. Some people think my paintings are not transparent watercolor
because of the extreme value range."
Because of the large size of her paintings, Stevens is unable to work
on location, so she uses her camera as her sketchbook. For six paintings
of La Jolla Cove, she took four hundred slides. She says it's also important
to study the actual location, because slides are not accurate in color.
She explains that we can see into the upper ultraviolet range with the
eye, but the camera can't; it misses some of the blues.
The
Temperature of light
Knowing
that the kind of light establishes color temperature as well as value,
Stevens sometimes begins by putting a very pale wash over the entire painting
to show the temperature of the light. Although the temperature of light
is often very subtle, she says you can learn to see it by just continuing
to look.
Unlike many artists, Stevens does not believe that if the light is warm,
all the shadows are cool and vice versa. She says it depends on what colors
are bouncing around in the painting. You can have warm colors reflected
in cool shadows and cool colors reflected in warm highlights. And because
she sees the shadows as dark areas with many colors reflected in them,
she never uses a neutral black. She always uses colors for the darks--to
keep them alive.

Water Light #33
Linda Stevens Moyer 30" x 42"
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