Perspective in landscape painting
Tissa HEWAVITHARANE
The word perspective can be a frightening concept to some who is
still learning to paint; and some students at first find perspective a
total mystery. In landscape painting however, perspective is less of a
problem than it is, for instance, in drawing buildings. There is less
need to worry about linear perspective, rather the need is to
concentrate on aerial perspective - receding colours and tonal values
which create the illusion of space and depth.
The atmosphere through which we view the landscape is filled with
particles of dust and water vapour. These will seem to cast a blue-grey
veil over distant objects, and even over not-so-distant objects. As a
result they dull the colour and also reduce surface detail. Colour
changes, therefore, as much as do lines and shapes.
Aerial perspective
This is one of the most useful techniques in water colour and gives
the illusion of depth better than anything else. It's based on the basic
principle in nature that light tones seem to reduce into distance
whereas darker tones seems to come forward.
In the distance the trees are small, a flat cool green is
applied with no detail. |
The next important thing to realise about recession is that objects
also appear to contain more blue the further distant they get. The
greens in grass and trees, for example, are quite pale and bluey at two
miles away and they get richer and warmer as they get nearer to the
viewer.
One would be surprised how many art students seem to be unaware of it
or, at any rate, forget it as soon as they start painting. They forget
it as soon as they start painting. They see what is obviously a dark
tree on the horizon about ten fields away so they paint it in a strong
dark tone, forgetting that there are still about five layers of trees
before the foreground is reached.
In other words they have used up their tonal 'big guns' in the
background and have nothing more powerful left for the foreground. The
same applies if too rich a green is used for a far distant field which
should have been held in reserve for a nearer one. I always suggest any
student to paint, from the furtherest distance, gradually moving forward
in planes to the foreground.
Counterchange
Counterchange is the placing of dark shapes against light ones, and
light shapes against dark. Basically, this is contrasting areas of dark
and light as on the chess board. This principal should be locked in your
mind all the time when you're painting, almost like a fighter waiting
for the opportunity to use his favourite punch. All the great masters
used this principle when they composed their work, but unless you're
aware of what's going on you probably accept it without appreciating it.
One would only realise how important it is when you see a painting done
by someone who hasn't yet learnt about counterchange.
A house may be put next to a tree, both with the same tone, even
though they may be a different colour, and the only way they can be
separated is by having to draw a line on top to show up the edges which
is incorrect. What they should be doing, instinctively, is to darken the
tree to show up the edge of the house or darken that bit of the house
where it comes in front of the tree.
The most obvious way of stressing the main centre of interest can be
achieved very dramatically by putting the darkest dark in the picture
against the lightest light, such as the pure white sail of yacht that
just happens to be passing in front of a very dark tree.
The same principle should be at work in a less obvious way all over
the picture, but these things don't just happen by accident in a
painting, they have to be thought out before hand.
Put the idea of counterchange into your brain permanently and use it
at all times as part of your armoury.
I have painted a simple landscape with trees in order to demonstrate
the effects of aerial perspective. In the distance the trees are small,
a flat cool green is applied with no detail.
In the middle ground I have added green with a mixture of light wash
of burnt sienna and have painted the trees and bushes in two values,
light and dark. By using aerial perspective I have created an illusion
of depth and space on my paper.
When painting landscape, of course it is vital to consider the
weather. It is of no use to paint the sky grey to portray a cloudy wet
day and then to paint the rest of the picture in bright colours as if it
were a sunny day. The painting demonstrates the effects of light on the
landscape.
To me it portrays a typical Sri Lankan landscape on a hot summer day.
It also demonstrates, as I have described aerial perspective.
To bring foreground forward I used very watery mixture of lemon green
with a layer of transparent glaze over the foreground to brighten it.
The colours I use in this painting are lemon green, burnt sienna, sap
green, orange and ultramarine blue.
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