Interview with Pastel Painter Rich Ford
COLORX3 on view at the Prairie Art Alliance Gallery until Thursday August 14th.
With the exception of the Barns series, most of the images in the collection are of trees or pathways. Why did you select these types of images for this exhibit?
Sangamon Heading North |
Reading about the subject made me realize this work in the practical sense once I began transferring that knowledge to the painting.
Are your images created from photographs or plein air (outside)?
Almost all the images
in this show are done from photographs.
However, I do a lot of plein air painting. Plein air has taught me how to create and
make decisions quickly. This allows me
to decide what in the photograph I am using and what to edit out. I never want to directly duplicate my
photographs. I might alter the design or
even the color of things. For instance,
I can use washes or change local colors while maintaining the values. By doing so, you can magically turn a summer
image into a fall image.
In the Barns series, you mention that you have restricted
your color palette. What inspired this
challenge?
Entrance to the Milk House |
For this challenge I
started with complementary colors. The
sky is one set of colors and the barns are another. You have to move the color around, weaving
things together so the eye can make sense of it. “Yellow Ivy” was done with split complementary. This time I wanted a yellow sky. That meant the evergreens would be
purple. This type of color challenge
dictates what the final colors will be.
I take each painting
as a new challenge. I may approach the
same subject but in a whole new way, always pushing the boundaries. It keeps things interesting.
Why did the rest of the series not continue as abstractions?
The Way Out |
What is next for you as an artist?
I don’t know. I keep running up against new challenges that interest me.
Right now I am working on cacti, but I am using limited color. No green for the cactus or white for the flower. I am also doing this series on recycled paper, paper that I used for previous works that did not pan out. Good paper means that you can hose it off. There will be a stain left on the paper. That creates an additional challenge to find a way to work with the remaining stain. If there is a red orange background I may have to use a turquoise to compliment. The color wheel can work for you—a tool to make things work properly.
Follow our blog for to meet the other artist features in COLORX3 on view until August 14.
Right now I am working on cacti, but I am using limited color. No green for the cactus or white for the flower. I am also doing this series on recycled paper, paper that I used for previous works that did not pan out. Good paper means that you can hose it off. There will be a stain left on the paper. That creates an additional challenge to find a way to work with the remaining stain. If there is a red orange background I may have to use a turquoise to compliment. The color wheel can work for you—a tool to make things work properly.
Follow our blog for to meet the other artist features in COLORX3 on view until August 14.