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The Portrait in Oil, Theory and Practice

In the six-three-hour oil painting sessions of this course we will paint few portraits from photographic references I will provide and Masters’ works, focusing on the method and technique and bringing each work to a finish, refining the painting technique and the quality of the final result.

We will paint using both the direct painting technique, used by the impressionists, and the indirect painting technique, typical of the Old Masters. We will also practice painting with   limited palette, a fundamental method that permits to understand how to use chroma, temperature, value, tint and tone when painting.

The participants of the course, will also be encouraged to work on an independent project: a portrait of a subject of their choice, a good way to start making personal aesthetic and technical choices, and put to work the notions discussed and practiced in class. Composition, color mixing, paint handling, materials, color theory, color mixing, color blending and the techniques employed by a few masters, are some of the topics, among others, that will be discussed and practiced throughout the duration of the course.

Open to all levels.

Materials

Paint: alizarine crimson, cadmium red medium ultramarine blue, cobalt blue cadmium

  • yellow lemon, cadmium yellow, yellow ochre, burnt sienna, burnt umber, black, white.
  • A wooden, plastic, or disposable palette. If you buy a wooden palette, make sure it is treated with a few layers of linseed oil to prevent the untreated wood to soak up the oil from the paint. I can show you how to do this in class, but you’ll need a disposable or plastic palette for the first class.
  • A variety of brushes: hog and synthetic will do; Filbert or bright, #2, 6, 8, and 12 will do. You will also need a few round, synthetic brushes, #2 and 4. You can also use the colors that you already have and we will discuss about these materials in class.
  • Linseed oil (refined linseed oil will suffice), Galkid or Liquin, Turpenoid or other low odor solvent.
  • Compressed charcoal pencils in hard and medium gradations(B-2B). Good brands are General’s and Wolff’s carbon.
  • Rags or paper towels.
  • A metal cup for the medium and a palette knife.
  • Canvas or canvas boards size 20”by 16”, or so.
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Availability of Courses' Recordings

As part of the services offered by the New Renaissance Atelier, you will have access to the recordings of the video sessions of all the courses you purchased for one year.
You will find the links to the videos in your Personal Video Library that has been set up specifically for you. Please keep this Video library link on your desktop or in your browser for easy access.

In case You missed a course You are interested in, You can purchase the recording of the video sessions, by clicking on the menu above

roberto osti
roberto osti
Roberto Osti teaches figure drawing and human anatomy for artists at the New York Academy of Art and the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts. Formally trained as a medical illustrator before becoming a fine artist, Osti has contributed his work to many science and art publications. His paintings have been exhibited in galleries in Europe and the United States. He is the author of Basic Human Anatomy (2016), an art instruction best seller and classic reference book. His latest book , Dynamic Human Anatomy has been released in March 2021.
The portrait in oil, theory and practice feb-mar24
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