Edge modeling is an essential ingredient to successful representational painting. The first thing I look for is what Reilly called the "Big Blur". Where does the subject blend into the atmosphere? Look for areas where the value on the subject is nearly the same value as the adjacent background and obliterate the edge. This is your softest edge.
Go to the light side and look for the main (light) effect, the focal point in the light. Establish your hardest edge here.
All other edges can vary between these two extremes. Hard edges help project the form toward the viewer, and soft edges help make the form recede. I use edge-modeling as a design tool to control the viewer's visual path around the painting.
"Purple Scarf" oil 30"x24" by John Ennis |
From Reilly's notes:
Edge Modeling is basically a skill, without it no painter excels.
It helps to create atmosphere, putting the model in the room, existing in space.
It helps to create atmosphere, putting the model in the room, existing in space.
It relates the form to the background.
It heightens the effect of light on the subject.
It aids selective looking.
It is done at every stage, Wash-in, Lay-in, Painting.
The diagram below illustrates the variety of edges and the process for softening edges of varying hardness. The two strokes of paint adjacent to each other represent a hard edge. A slightly softer edge can be made by dragging a clean brush over the border of where the strokes meet. To create an even softer edge, take a clean brush and zig-zag the brush, pulling paint into the adjacent areas all along the length of the stoke. Then with a clean brush softly brush down over the zig-zag creating the soft transition. When the size of the area to be softened exceeds the width of your biggest brush, lay in a half-tone value, and brush the light into the halftone and the halftone into the shadow using the technique described.
© John Ennis 2010
Next Topic: The Munsell Color Notation
I just found out about your effort to share the Reilly Papers from "Underpaintings". Thank you so much for this effort!
ReplyDeleteThanks for doing this, it will be much appreciated by all.
ReplyDeleteHi John;
ReplyDeleteThank you for publishing these wonderful notes. They will help me as well as all of my students. I look forward to future editions.
Brian Smith
Great post, definitely interested in seeing more of his methods.
ReplyDelete^^^^ Agreed. I promise this great info will be put to good use!!
ReplyDeleteThese are awesome. Thanks!
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing this. I will be following closely
ReplyDeleteI also just found out about your blog from "Underpaintings". (Btw, your art was not unfamiliar to me, though - I remember several years ago I saw your portraits in Int'l Artist mag). Keep up the good work!
ReplyDeleteThank you for your efforts! What a treasure to make these notes available to artists.
ReplyDeleteI'll be following along as you make these lectures public! Thank you for your efforts. Education in representational art is harder to find these days and I appreciate anything I can find.
ReplyDeleteCan't wait to see more! Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteThanks so much for doing this, what a brilliant idea for a blog!
ReplyDeleteGreatly looking forward to the presentation of this material. Already loving the first few posts.
ReplyDeleteThank you, John, for sharing with us this priceless knowledge. I love reading your explanation of the notes, looking forward to more great posts from you.
ReplyDeleteI am really looking forward to the wealth of information I can learn!
ReplyDeleteThank you , thank you, thank you. I am an art student and I can tell you without any doubt that this will be tremendously helpful information for anyone who reads it. I have Doug Higgin's book, Apollo Dorian's book and I have read Faragasso's and Covino's books. I am enthralled with Reilly's teachings and have in my own blundering way attempted to study and implement them. This information is tremendously valuable and I thank you so much for choosing to share it freely with us.
ReplyDeleteDo you think this is similar to or different from "shapewelding"? I've seen it referred to a lot recently, thanks to James Gurney. In other words, I'm wondering if it's a term Mr. Reilly used?
ReplyDeleteLove this. Please keep going.
ReplyDeleteI love this. Please keep going.
ReplyDeleteThank you for doing this it's an amazing effort and I will be visiting this site a lot.
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This is some awesome information and knowledge that you are passin on,sir.
ReplyDeleteThanks. I will do my best to something good with it.
Thank you.
ReplyDeleteVery interesting, thanks for the effort!
ReplyDeleteThank you for taking the time to do this. I'm excited to see what's coming next.
ReplyDeleteI just found out about this blog. Great notes! Thank you for doing this.
ReplyDeleteI was a student of Glen Orbik, so it's always great to see Reilly get some love. I got to visit John Asaro's studio last year and saw a lot of his own notes from Reilly's classes. I look forward to seeing more.
ReplyDeleteVery cool! Thanks for posting these.
ReplyDeleteI am a Big fan of Jerry Allison as well and would love to hear more on him too if possible.
Thanks a lot for the effort of making this knowledge available to people!
ReplyDeleteInstantly bookmarked! Thanks so much for posting!
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