Step-by-Step Demo of an Oil Landscape Painting by David Ligare

Engaged in his own version of time travel, David Ligare, with his confessed obsession with ancient Greco-Roman culture, creates his exquisite paintings in a search for primal unity. In this free excerpt from “Literate Landscapes” by Richard Stull in The Artist’s Magazine (May 2013), Ligare describes each step as he paints Seascape with Large Rock (below, right; oil, 60×90), and how light plays a key role.

Capturing Direct and Indirect Light
by David Ligare

Oil Landscape Painting by David Ligare
Seascape with Large Rock (oil, 60×90) by David Ligare

I was preparing an exhibition of still life paintings for Hirschl & Adler Modern in New York City. Because most of these works were fairly small, I also wanted to include a few larger works that would relate to the seascapes seen in the backgrounds of the still lifes. These larger seascapes would also help anchor the room (below).

No matter whether I’m painting a simple rock or a figure in a landscape or a still life, it’s important to me to use the late afternoon sunlight and to create a sense of wholeness by recognizing all of the direct and indirect light sources. Everything in nature is a reflection in one way or another of everything around it.

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Step-by-Step Demo:

David Ligare's free demo on oil painting

Here you see Seascape with Large Rock (oil, 60×90) on the left within the exhibition of my still lifes at Hirschl & Adler.

 

David Ligare's free demo on oil painting: Study

1. Study: First I made a 9×12 study in oil of a seascape with a large rock.

 

David Ligare's free demo on oil painting: Underpainting and Drawing

2. Underpainting and drawing: I coated a large canvas (60×90) with a mixture of Winsor & Newton underpainting white and Venetian red and let it dry. Then, on the underpainted canvas, I created a careful drawing based on my study. I drew in charcoal so that I could easily make changes. Next, I went over the charcoal lines with pencil and then wiped off the charcoal so that it wouldn’t corrupt the paint.

 

David Ligare's free demo on oil painting: Dark Beginnings

3. Dark beginnings: I began painting in my usual manner, addressing the darkest areas first and even making the lightest areas darker than they’d eventually be.

 

David Ligare's free demo on oil painting: Graduated Color

4. Graduated color: I continued to develop the painting, area by area. I laid in the sky and the sea within a day so that I could easily blend their transitions. To do this, I added a small amount of turpentine to thin the paint and mixed five or six large “blobs” of paint that graduated from the pale coloring near the horizon to the deeper blue higher in the sky. I painted the sky with No. 12 bristle flats and rounds followed by a large badger-hair blender.

 

Seascape with Large Rock (oil, 60x90) by David Ligare
Seascape with Large Rock (oil, 60×90) by David Ligare

5. Highlights and reflections: During the final phase of painting, I went over the entire picture, lightening areas and adding gleams of light. I like a painting that has the full reach of values, from the deep darks to sparkling lights. I also added warms and cools to show reflections coming from the sky or bouncing off nearby sunlit surfaces. Here, you see the finished Seascape with Large Rock (above; oil, 60×90).

 

At the age of 5, David Ligare moved with his family from Oak Park, Illinois, to the California coast. As a young man, he studied at the Art Center College of Design in Pasadena. Youthful peregrinations followed, both in Europe (he actually walked up to and knocked on the front door of Salvador Dalí’s home in Port Lligat on the Costa Brava in Spain and spent the afternoon chatting with the aristocratic surrealist in the artist’s studio) and in the United States, especially in New York City. He eventually settled in Monterey County on the California coast. The surrounding dramatic coastal lands serve as subjects and backgrounds for many of his paintings. He’s represented by Hirschl & Adler Modern in New York City and Winfield Gallery in Carmel, California. Learn more about Ligare at www.davidligare.com. Read the full feature article in The Artist’s Magazine (May 2013).

 

 

DemersstudiosmFree video preview from ArtistsNetwork.tv!
Click here to view a preview of “Marine Painting: The Art of the Wave with Don Demers.”

 


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