Using as her subject a sunlit yellow flower, Dianne shows a step by step method for reading and translating value degrees found in light and shadow. She begins with general areas of both, then refines them to their more specific degrees of value, making clear how we can easily compose values when we understand how they are formed by light and shadow.
This lesson is S1L2, Composing Values ofthe COMPOSING MATTERS series. Using as her subject a sunlit yellow flower, Dianne shows a step by step method for reading and translating value degrees found in light and shadow. She begins with general areas of both, then refines them to their more specific degrees of value, making clear how we can easily compose values when we understand how they are formed by light and shadow.
In this series, Dianne introduces you to her language and her manner of teaching. Believing that composing is our true nature and therefore the heartbeat of painting, Dianne is passionate about artists learning to compose at the beginning of their journey. Technique alone is empty without awareness.
With every brushstroke we make, we are composing. Just as with any creation, we begin with a structure, then as the art work begins we place shapes, values and colors according to the concept with which we are working. The more we practice, the deeper our experience becomes. We move to a higher levels of thinking and decision-making. We have moments when our intention is to bring clarity and resolution to the work.
It’s not necessary to memorize principles when we can turn them into tools and make them work for us one at a time. If we focus on them as individual organic slices of the total creative process, they become second nature to the way we work. THAT gives us unlimited potential to creative expression. They are as simple as learning to drive a car.
Read Dianne’s Compose blog posts HERE. Visit Dianne’s website and example her work HERE. And visit her YouTube Channel with dozens of Quick Tips HERE.