Sanguine & Charcoal Portraits

I love both sanguine portraits and charcoal portraits, I think there is something very expressive drawing a face in charcoal, maybe because of the simplicity of the black and white. Then there is the poetry of sanguine that creates a beautiful soft effect, with the loveliest earthy reds against the cream paper.

Here below is a charcoal portrait of Polly who is 20 years old.

Polly, charcoal on paper. 50cm x 70cm
Polly, charcoal on paper. 50cm x 70cm

These are four sanguine portraits on heavyweight Arches cream paper (30cm x 40cm (A4) just a little bigger) of four siblings commissioned for a special present. All with lovely faces to draw. When I use sanguine I like to also combine the red with graphite pencil, this gives the colour some depth as I find the colour can become too saturated. I have also brush-washed over large areas with water and sanguine. It is a lovely generous medium and great fun to work with.

Willow, sanguine. 30cm x 40cm
Ned, sanguine. 30cm x 40cm
Monty, sanguine. 30cm x 40cm
Tiggy, sanguine. 30cm x 40cm

The sanguine comes from the art shop Zecchi in Florence, Italy. It has a selection of quality art materials to feast your eyes upon and the sanguine is bought in rock form. No fancy pencils here just a big prehistoric rock of iron ore! At the end of this post I have made a short video of the process from my cave-man sanguine rock to ready to use bespoke pointy pencil for these detailed portrait drawings.

Below are the drawings side by side.

Thankyou for looking. If you are interested in any drawing portrait commissions please contact me on:

annadennisart@gmail.com

COMMISSION A PAINTING

A brief video on how I made my sanguine drawing sticks.

I made this video starting from the block of red oxide which I ground on a heavy piece of glass using a glass muller, once it was ground into a powder which took about five minutes, I gradually added water until it resembled a thick paste that could be easily rolled into pencil thick sticks that fit inside my charcoal holder.

I made my sticks a little too thin dor my charcoal holder so I had to wrap a piece of paper towel around the stick so it would hold well in the holder.

I sharpened the sanguine sticks firstly using a sharp knife to get the pencil shape, and then perfected the point with sandpaper. The sanguine is quite brittle so I had to treat it carefully but I liked its colour and softness as a result.

Rainy Days

rainydays
Rainy Days. Oil on wood, 25cm x 35cm.

I don’t know about you but here in the north of Italy it has rained for the whole of June. Where is Summer? This is a study of my daughter who sits still long enough for me to paint, even though it’s nearly summer most days it feels like April!

In this painting I needed alot of Cadmium Red Light for the sofa which is an very intense orange/red – a really bright, bright red!  Other reds verging towards crimson are more darker and duller. I also really noticed while painting this how much cadmium yellow and red pigment I needed to mix into my palette to try and get that cozy artificial light coming in.

Cadmium is expensive to buy but worth every penny. High quality artist’s grade paints generally contain far more pigment than the cheaper student paints so in the long run you use less and they last much longer, both in the tube and on your painting. Once I ground a few tubes of my own cadmium red and that tube really did last along time, it was worth all the effort but now too unhealthy to make your own paints with children about!

Sleeping.

winnie&teosleeping_annadennis
My Children Sleeping. Oil on wood, 20cm x 30cm.

Aaaaah it’s that time of day again, when it’s all quiet apart from the sounds of sleeping children. The golden hour. It is both exciting to be a parent and to be a painter, life generally becomes more complicated but richer at the same time and if you mix the two together it becomes creatively rewarding when time is on you side!

 

Paddling Pool 2015

Paddling Pool 2015. Oil on Board, 30cm x 30cm.
Paddling Pool 2015. Oil on Board, 30cm x 30cm.

Summer + Sun + Children + Water + Paddling pool + a Hosepipe = Happiness!

A little oil painting sketch I did while supervising my children playing in the pool.

Portrait Sketch

Painting children from life is difficult, I guess you need a good memory to finish any details incase they move which they do all the time so I decided on a longer pose using Winnie as she slept as an excuse but then again a true portrait of her would be bouncing and running around…..but that is easier said than done!

How did Sorolla paint the finest details in blinding sunlight as the children he painted ran along beaches and splashed in waves? He definently had magic in his paintbrush!

Winnie Sleeping.  Oil on Board.  20cm x 25cm
Winnie Sleeping. Oil on Board. 20cm x 25cm

A portrait of my daughter.

A Portrait of my Daughter.  40cm x 50cm, oil on linen.
A Portrait of my Daughter. 40cm x 50cm, oil on linen.

I painted this oil on canvas a couple of years ago when my daughter was 18 months old. It was based on sketches and observation as she played around me in the studio, her hair and skin tones were important to me.