Saturday, April 29, 2017

Recycling: Torrit Grey

I got my tube of 2017 Torrit Grey this week, which has spurred me on to re-post a piece I wrote several years ago. When you read the post, you will see why recycling is especially appropriate in this case!



I just made a wonderful new discovery--Torrit Grey. I was befuddled by the promotion at my art supply store, which promised me a free tube of Torrit Grey paint if I bought a certain amount of goods. I did some research, and here's what I found out.

Gamblin Artists Colors is one of the large paint manufacturers in the US. Their factory uses an air filtration system made by a company called Torit. The air filters trap dry pigments that escape into the air during the paint mixing process. Every spring, Gamblin cleans out its air filters. Instead of taking  the pigment dust from the filters and dumping it in the landfill, they use it to make a special paint, which they call "Torrit Grey". Isn't that the coolest thing?

Because the combination of pigments cleaned out of the filters is never the same from year to year, the color Torrit Grey is never the same either. Recently, Gamblin has started labeling the tubes of Torrit Grey with the year of manufacture. So now we painters can collect tubes from various "vintage years", if you will, just like we would collect wines from different vintage years. It's a limited edition pigment!


Not only is Gamblin's approach very earth-friendly, it has the added lure of the mysterious: You never know what the next batch will be like until you open it. I am loving the 2013 batch---a beautiful dark grey, it makes a lovely soft grey when mixed with white. It almost has a slight violet cast...see photo below.





Torrit Grey is also great mixed with other colors. In his book "Landscape Painting Inside & Out"Kevin Macpherson advocates for scraping your palette as you work, and stashing the scrapings on the side, to be used in mixing other colors. Many painters call this their "mud". Kevin even suggests buying empty tubes and filling them with your mud, rather than discarding it at the end of a painting session...another great recycling approach. Here's to more earth-friendly ideas!


Thursday, April 20, 2017

Seeing Deeply



I am always thinking about the process of SEEING, and how we perceive the things around us. Today I'm sharing a few quotations that illuminate the way that artists see. Enjoy!


"Quartet"
Oil on Linen, 12 x 18
(c) Lesley Powell 2017

"Ordinary things deeply seen can have a nameless beauty and mystery."  -- Donald Beal

"Cultivate an ever-continuous power of observation. Wherever you are, be always ready to make slight notes of postures, groups and incidents." --John Singer Sargent



"Afternoon Light"
Oil on Paper, 8 x 8
(c) Lesley Powell 2017

"[In painting,] the motive isn’t to get a representation but to bear witness to seeing."  --Martha Armstrong

The real journey of discovery consists not in seeing new landscapes, but in having new eyes." --Marcel Proust


Sunday, April 2, 2017

When Less is More


"My Dining Room"
Oil on Canvas, 29 x 23 3/4
John Singer Sargent

For a variety of reasons, ranging from the sublime to the ridiculous, I have recently launched into a new series of paintings using only three colors. Yes, that's right, only three tubes of paint. I have been working exclusively with white, black and burnt sienna. It's amazing how much you can say with just these three.



"Morning Light"
Oil on Paper, 8 x 6
(c) Lesley Powell 2017

As soon as I finished my first painting with this extremely limited palette (immediately above), I was hooked! Flooding into my mind came images of paintings I have loved over the years, which I remembered as virtually monochromatic.  Perhaps my all time favorite in this category is John Singer Sargent's painting of his dining room, seen at the top of this