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Jessica Libor

~ Studio Journal

Jessica Libor

Tag Archives: art expert

Cherry Blossom Painting Time

29 Sunday Apr 2018

Posted by Jessica Libor in art, fashion, In My Studio, Inspiration, lifestyle

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advice for artists, art, art expert, artist, beautiful, beautiful art, cherry blossoms, classical realism, contemporary art, contemporary female artists, contemporary realism, creative, creativity, drawing, emerging artist, emerging artists, Fairmount Park, female artist, female artists, fine art, forever 21, h&m, how to be an artist, how to paint, how to paint like the masters, inspiration, inspiration for artists, jessica libor, Lawrence Alma tadema, Lucy Paris, oil painting, oil paintings, painter, painting, pennsylvania academy of the fine arts, philadelphia artists, social entrepreneurship, spring fashion, technical advice for artists, the roses of heliogabalus

Ohh April! My very favorite time of the year is when the cherry blossoms are out in full bloom, and the great long stretch of summer is out before us in glorious, warm possibility. I spent some time this week painting the cherry blossoms and happily reveling in their heavenly beauty… I was in the park almost every day! Check out my time lapse of the painting done and a few of my other pieces. Send me a message at jlibor@jessicalibor.com if you are interested in collecting any of these oil sketches.

White top and pink skirt: Forever 21. Lavender dress: true vintage. Blue dress: Urban Outfitters. Floral dress: true vintage. Striped top: Lucy Paris. Hats: Forever 21. Sunglasses: Green Street Consignment.

Which is your favorite look? What about favorite cherry blossom painting?

I can’t leave without posting the most epic floral painting ever. “The Roses is Heliogabalus” by Sir Lawrence Alma Tadema. Enjoy! Until next time,

Jessica Libor

Www.jessicalibor.com

Beginning my “Let’s Connect Philly” painting for the Barnes Foundation

23 Monday Apr 2018

Posted by Jessica Libor in Exhibitions, How To, In My Studio

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advice for artists, art, art expert, artist, beautiful, beautiful art, beautiful paintings of women, classical realism, contemporary art, contemporary female artists, contemporary realism, creative, creativity, drawing, emerging artist, emerging artists, female artist, how to be an artist, how to paint like the masters, inspiration, inspiration for artists, jessica libor, Let’s Connect Philly, mural arts, pafa, painter, painting, pennsylvania academy of the fine arts, residency, the Barnes foundation

This month I am lucky enough to be living in a Philadelphia zip code, so am eligible to participate in the Barnes Foundation and Mural Arts competition and exhibition at the Barnes Foundation, called “Let’s Connect Philly.” It’s a really cool idea– artists are to pick one piece that inspires them (I picked Renoir) and do a small piece inspired by it! During the exhibition (in May–June) the public can go and vote on their favorite pieces, with the winning artists getting a residency and stipend at the Barnes! Needless to say I’m very excited to enter! Above is a time lapse for the first 7 hours of painting I’ve done on my piece. It’s not done yet, but when it is, I’ll post a side by side of the piece by Renoir that inspired me and my own.

Jessica Libor

Www.jessicalibor.com

Beginning a new painting: Magical Creatures

12 Thursday Apr 2018

Posted by Jessica Libor in art, In My Studio, Inspiration, Shop

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advice for artists, art, art expert, art school, artist, beautiful, beautiful art, beautiful paintings of women, classical realism, contemporary art, contemporary female artists, contemporary realism, creative, creativity, drawing, emerging artist, emerging artists, female artist, how to be an artist, how to paint like the masters, inspiration, inspiration for artists, jessica libor, MFA, pafa, painter, painting, pennsylvania academy of the fine arts, social entrepreneurship

It’s always the first day that it goes the quickest. After that, it is all about refining the details. Here is a unicorn painting inspired by my visit to the Met Cloisters and seeing “The Hunt of the Unicorn”. Click the video to see the time lapse!

You could spend forever on a painting, but it’s all about the quality and focus of the time you spend on it. Blocking out all other distractions and focusing all your mind and skill on the painting is like a meditation practice. I am always surprised by how much more quickly and better quality work comes out of a painting session when I’m in this state! I read a book once that described this state as “flow.” Perhaps it deserves a post of its own!

This painting I’m currently working on, “Magical Creatures,” is not completed, so be on the lookout for another post about the finished painting.

In the meantime, my recent painting after Fragonard, ” The Chase,” is completed, with a limited edition print run available in my shop. The prints turned out beautifully…every little brushstroke is captured in detail, and each one is on acid free archival quality paper that is velvety and smooth. Hand signed by me! To grab yours, click here.

Art exhibition with Lord and Taylor

13 Friday Mar 2015

Posted by Jessica Libor in Uncategorized

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art, art expert, art students, artist, artist bios, artist interview, artist interviews, artist studios, beautiful, beautiful art, beautiful paintings of women, classical realism, contemporary female artists, emerging artist, events, fairy tale art, fantasy, female artist, female artists, fine art, king of prussia mall, lord & taylor, lord and taylor

Sisters, oil and 23 karat gold leaf on panel, 18"x24", Jessica Libor 2015

Sisters, oil and 23 karat gold leaf on panel, 18″x24″, Jessica Libor 2015

I am so very honored and excited to invite you to a special art show called “Portrait of a Fantasy” on Friday, March 20 and Saturday, March 21 at Lord and Taylor in King of Prussia Mall.

This unique partnership between my artistic vision and Lord and Taylor is such a great collaboration for me. I hope you will come to see my newest works on display in the center of the store, with ten paintings and many print selections. The work will be available for purchase, and I will be present the entire time. I truly hope to see you there!

The details are as follows:

Private reception: Friday, March 20, 5:30-8:30pm
Day open exhibition: Saturday, March 21, 12:00-6:00

Please RSVP to jlibor@jessicalibor.com if you would like to come to the private reception. Thank you so much, and I look forward to seeing you there!

Creatively,

Jessica

smiling jess

ps-don’t forget to subscribe via email if you’d like to keep up to date!

Painting in Progress

21 Friday Mar 2014

Posted by Jessica Libor in In My Studio, Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts

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advice for artists, art expert, artist, artists, beautiful paintings of women, classical realism, drawing, emerging artist, how to paint, inspiration for artists, painting, romantic

This week I’ve been painting away at a new work.  It’s got lush folds and fabrics that are delicious to paint, and some mouth watering fruit that’s nestled in the hand of a figure that’s not seen in the picture.  It’s been fun playing with the different textures and colors in the painting, bringing the fabric, flesh, and fruit to light.  It’s 10×12 inches, oil on board.  No title yet.  Still got a little ways to go on it.

Work in progress by Jessica Libor, 2014

Work in progress by Jessica Libor, 2014

The Fourth Wall Panel Review: A public art critique

13 Thursday Mar 2014

Posted by Jessica Libor in Uncategorized

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art critic, art expert, art school, art students, artist, beautiful art, crispin sartwell, fourth wall, how to be an artist, jessica libor, MFA, pafa, painters, pennsylvania academy of the fine arts, philadelphia artists, school, six names of beauty

IMG_4626

On Tuesday, March 11, 2014, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts presented its sixth annual Fourth Wall Panel Review.  The literature accompanying the event describe it thus:

“[The Fourth Wall is] A unique event designed to shed light on the review process employed within the contemporary art world.  This panel brings together a curator, artist and author to consider work submitted by MFA Thesis students in the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts Graduate Program.  The afternoon will conclude with the selection of three students whose work the panel believes demonstrates the most professional promise.  Join us as we try to collapse the wall between artists and the procedures that determine their opportunities.”

For students in the program, this was optional to participate in, but we were strongly encouraged to submit our work to be reviewed.  Many of the MFA2 students did indeed participate, which is no small feat of bravery.  As artists it is common to feel that your soul is being exposed when your artwork is shown, and the vulnerability of having your work not only shown on a large screen in front of hundreds of people, but also critically discussed by strangers to be heard by everyone, truly takes courage.  I know that some of the figurative artists in the program chose not to participate because they knew their work would not be what the judges would favor.  For me, I was more curious than anything else.  My recent work seems to divide people between favor and dislike, so I was curious to hear what the art critics had to say.

The critics were as follows:

Alex Baker, director of Fleisher/Ollman Gallery, Philadelphia.  Previously, he was senior curator of contemporary art at the National Gallery of Victoria (NGV) from 2008 to 2012.  Formerly Curator of the Contemporary Art at the Pafa and Associate Curator at the ICA (Philadelphia), he has organized many exhibitions of note.

Josephine Halvorson is a painter who lives and works in western Massachusetts.  Her work has been exhibited internationally and she is represented by Sikkman Jenkins & Co. (New York) and Peter Freeman Inc. (Paris).  She is the recipient of several grants including the Fullbright Fellowship and the Tiffany Foundation Award.  Halvorson is a critic in the MFA painting department at Yale.

Crispin Sartwell teaches in the art and philosophy departments at Dickinson College in Carlisle, PA.  Sartwell is the author of a number of books on aesthetics and art, including The Six Names of Beauty.  His work is featured in a number of prominent publications, as well.

The afternoon started with a packed house, with numbers dwindling as the hours went by.  The first round, the critics went through every one of the 35 student’s work, talking about the strengths and weaknesses of it, and what they liked or disliked.  By the end of the first round, I had a pretty good idea of who the final five would be based on the comments and aesthetic leanings revealed by the critics.  It seemed that Alex Baker was the most postmodern leaning, with Crispin Sartwell arguing more conservatively, with Josephine Halvorson a balance between the two but leaning more postmodern.  All three were extremely articulate in letting the student body know why they were making the decisions they did as they cut the artists out round by round.  I found the whole process  terribly interesting.  It was a very weird vibe…knowing who made the work, but listening to strangers talk about it whereas you know the makers as your friends, and know the back stories to each piece.  IMG_4628

IMG_4631

The event was clinical and competitive by its very nature.  I was glad that I participated, however, because I gained valuable insight into how my work is understood by different people.  I’ve come to the realization that some will love your work, some will not, and that’s ok.  Do we really want to make work that pleases everyone?  The work you make is valid because it’s your expression.  And the truer you are to who you are artistically and aesthetically, the more satisfied you’ll be with your work–and the more fun you’ll have.  And if you believe in your work and what you’re doing, people will see your conviction, and your audience will come naturally.

Many of the students felt that this 4th wall was much more helpful than other years.  Part of that was the fact that David Dempewolf, a resident seminar critic at Pafa, was monitoring and keeping the critics on track.

At the end of the afternoon, the winners were announced: Katie Petrillo, Tiffany Tate, and Mary McCann.  An all-female cast!  The work was an eclectic mix.  Katie’s work is a mixed media mind-bending mix of optical illusions manipulating depth of field through tromp l’oeil and sculpture within clear shadowboxes, inspired by her own unique sight experiences.  Tiffany’s work is photography, transforming the ordinary and mundane sights of life into meditative, beautiful moments.  Mary’s work is an imaginative mix of sculpture inspired by stories and tales, and contrasting ink drawings that look like universes unto themselves.  Congratulations to these talented and hardworking ladies that I am honored to call my classmates!

Left to right, Katie, Tiffany, Mary

Left to right, Katie, Tiffany, Mary

Really, though, the work that was displayed at the 4th wall this year was all spectacular.  The work was solid and well thought out, with each person’s body of work a unique and multifaceted gem.  Each one of these artists who participated is really a winner in my book, because I see each of you with true professional promise.  Cheers!

Feel free to share this post if you found it helpful and educational.  Also, don’t forget to subscribe to my blog if you’d like to be notified with each new post!

How to Paint Like the Masters: Part 7, Window Shading and Glazing

07 Tuesday Feb 2012

Posted by Jessica Libor in How To, Inspiration, Journeys, Uncategorized

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advice for artists, art expert, Caravaggio, classical realism, drawing, education in new york, emerging artist, emerging artists, french academic painting, glazing and scumbling methods, glazing for artists, grand central academy of art, how to be a skilled artist, how to be an artist, how to draw from the live model, how to draw like a pro, how to draw people, how to draw realistically, how to paint like an artist, how to paint like the masters, how to paint realistic people, how to paint well, jessica libor, Joshua LaRock, new york art education, technical advice for artists, the best places to learn, window shading for artists

Maria (unfinished) by Joshua LaRock, during the window shading stage over top of ebauche

This is the stage in the painting where it all starts to come together.  In part six of this series of posts on how to paint like the masters, we left off when finishing the ebauche, a thin layer of paint and turpinoid with a few drops of oil mixed in, to set the tone of the painting.

Today, we will address layer two, using a thicker coat of paint, mixed with retouch varnish and oil (either poppy, walnut of linseed).  Later, we’ll discuss the glazing.

Start out by scumbling retouch varnish or oil over the ebauche.  The brings the full color to life again.  When choosing how to mix your lights, keep in mind that titanium white is stronger and colder, while flake white is more transparent and warmer.

Window shading is step two of painting in the classical 19th century French academic method.  They call it that because it is like pulling a shade down on a window, working in full detail from the top to the bottom of the canvas.  Finishing the painting is the goal for this stage.  Watch your model carefully for subsurface scattering–when light passes through and reflects inside the skin, like your hand in front of a flashlight.  Places common to seeing subsurface scattering are under the eyelids, the ears, the nose and hands.  Anywhere where your skin is thinner and more blood comes to the surface, you will see this subtle glowing effect.

After the window shading layer dries, you should have a completed painting.  If you would like to deepen the shadows more or add more transparency to the painting, consider a third layer, by glazing and scumbling.  Check out the detail from John Waterhouse’s Flora and the Zephyrs, where he used many layers of glaze to achieve a glowing look to her skin, fabric and roses.

Detail from Flora and the Zephyrs by John Waterhouse

 

Glazing: dark, thinned paint over lighter paint

Scumbling: Light paint, thicker and more opaque, over dark paint

In order to glaze and scumble, the painting must be completely dry, otherwise you risk rubbing out all your hard work.

To make something look glowing like oranges in a still life, glazing is the way to go.  If something looks transparent, paint it with transparent layers.  For the glazing layer, use GamVar, made by Gamblin, with a sponge brush.

Minneolas, by Joshua LaRock, oil on linen, 2009

That’s the final layer.  Congratulations on learning how to paint like the masters!

Image

How to Paint Like the Masters: Part 6, Painting the Ebauche

03 Friday Feb 2012

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advice for artists, art expert, classical realism, ebauche painting, education in new york, emerging artist, grand central academy of art, how to be a skilled artist, how to be an artist, how to draw, how to draw from the live model, how to draw like a pro, how to paint like the masters, how to succeed as an artist, inspiration for artists, jessica libor, technical advice for artists

Almost-completed Ebauche stage by Joshua LaRock 2011

This post will continue our journey we began several posts ago, picking up where we left off at the last stage of rendering the drawing.  We are beginning this post with the assumption that you have in front of you a canvas with the transferred drawing on it, the very correct drawing that you’ve been working so hard on!

These are notes that I am sharing with you again from that particularly helpful workshop led by Joshua LaRock that I took at the Grand Central Academy of Art this past summer.

I remember when this day came at last, it was the beginning of the second week, and a Monday.  I was so excited to begin painting!  However, the teacher lectured for a while before we could begin…which was exactly what most of us needed.  I gained a wealth of information, without which my painting would not have improved.

We began the morning with some basic definitions, and built from there.

The Ebauche: Layer 1 of paint, a thinned down value study with mostly turpenoid and a few drops of oil.

Beginning the Ebauche, by Joshua LaRock 2011

Value: the lightness or darkness

Hue:  Color (red, yellow, green, blue)

Chroma: the intensity relative to neutral (gray)

All skintones are a mixture of yellow and red.

The plane most perpendicular (most facing) the light is the most chromatic (the most color, ignoring the hightlights).  As a form turns away from the light, the color gets darker in value and less in chroma.  The highest chromatic (color intense) colors are straight from the tube.  The hightest chroma paints are the cadmium colors.  When painting shadows, remember that black is actually a very dark blue.  On a one color object, keep the HUE (pure color) at all costs, no matter how light or dark things get.

shapeimage_6

Mandarins, 11″x14″, Joshua LaRock 2009

When setting up the pallete, try to stay organized.  Your pallette is a reflection of your mind.  Start out to the left with the yellows, then go to the reds, then the greens, and lastly blues.  Below is a list of the exact paints we used for the full pallette, in order of how they should be laid out on the pallette.

1. White

2. Lemon Yellow

3. Cadmium Yellow

4. Naples Yellow

5. Yellow Ochre

6. Raw Sienna

7. Raw Umber

8. Cadmium Orange

9. Cadmium Red

10. Venetian Red

11. Alizarin Crimson

12. Burnt Umber

13. White

14. Cadmium Green

15. Sap Green

16. Viridian Green

17. Cerulean Blue

18. Ultramarine Blue

19. Cobalt Blue

20. Violet (Dioxazine Purple)

21. Ivory Black

22. VanDyke Brown

25% Raw umber, 25% burnt sienna, and 50% black make a perfect neutral, that you can make lighter or darker with white.

As far as a medium when you are painting, I personally use Walnut oil, because it’s so environmentally healthy you could theoretically eat it and be fine.  However, the traditional method is to use linseed oil or poppy oil to mix with the paint to make it more buttery.  Poppy oil doesn’t yellow as much as linseed oil, however.

Either way you go, you DO NOT need to use an oil at this point while doing the traditional Ebauche (underpainting).  If you use too much oil with your paint at this point, then in subsequent layers, your paint will bead up.  When doing the Ebauche, use paint thinner to thin the paint, or an odorless turpenoid (natural substitute for turpentine).

When beginning painting the Ebauche, keep in mind that it is to get the overall general effect of the painting, with colors, values and feel of the work.  Don’t lose your drawing at this stage.  You can start correcting your drawing if needed.  When you paint a dark over a light, you get a chromatic rise–this is what happens when you glaze.  So overall, your ebauche should be a little lighter in value than what you want your painting to look like at the end, if you’d like to glaze over it.

Start painting the ebauche with the lights, the highest in chroma and value (for instance, typically the nose and forhead), and go darker in value and lower in chroma in the shadow from there.

Mix up a separate mixture for the shadows, and use a separate brush to keep the painting as clean as possible.

Also, mix up a separate mixture for the hair.

Protect the hight value, high chroma parts of the painting!  Get all the lights and darks established before going into detail.  For example, do a section on the forehead, side of cheek and shadow and hair, then do the rest of the face, using those sections as keys of light or darkness on the form.

Sometimes, when two complementary colors are set next to each other, they both appear brighter.  This is a similar optical effect to simultaneous contrast.  Don’t let your eyes deieve you!

Think again of sculpting, same as the drawing!  You want the picture to leap out of the canvas into life.

The legendary William Adolphe Bouguereau painted in for layers, and this was the first.  Only three more to go!  Below, check out his unfinished painting, where you can clearly see the ebauche stage showing through.

Unfinished painting by Bouguereau

Posted by Jessica Libor | Filed under How To, Inspiration, Journeys

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How to Paint Like the Masters, Part 5: Advice on Rendering Details in Drawing

23 Monday Jan 2012

Posted by Jessica Libor in How To, Inspiration, Journeys

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advice for artists, angel academy of art, art expert, artist bios, drawing, education in new york, emerging artist, emerging artists, grand central academy of art, graydon parrish, how to be a skilled artist, how to be an artist, how to draw, how to draw from the live model, how to draw like a pro, how to draw people, how to paint like the masters, how to paint well, how to succeed as an artist, inspiration for artists, instruction, jessica libor, technical advice for artists, the best places to learn

"Antique" by Megan Byrne, Angel Academy of Art

While I was taking this workshop at GCA, I was ready to be done with drawing at this point.  I wanted to get to the fun part…painting!  There’s something so freeing and satisfying about the brush tip making marks on your canvas, and the ability to manipulate it.  However, I disciplined myself to stay on task one more day, and was surprised at how much my drawing developed in just one day of adding details.

As you work on rendering the correct values for the shadow shapes, remember that there should never be a harsh line.

At this point, you’re allowed to think about reflected light, like the kind you may see underneath the chin, or on the side of the nose, or above the eyes right below the eyebrows.  Reflected light helps support the volume you already created with your lights and darks.  Once you pass the terminator (the point where the form turns away completely from the light), all light in the shadow comes from reflected light.  This is particularly helpful to know if painting, when the reflected light may be a different color tint than the direct form light (for instance, the form light may be coming from a lamp, and the reflected light is a natural light from a window.  In that case the reflected light would be blueish, and the form light more yellow.  But I’m getting ahead of myself 🙂 )  Back to drawing!

"Maria" Final stage drawing, graphite on paper, by Jessica Libor 2011

You shouldn’t have as much information such as details and variation in value in the shadows as you do in the light.  Put in LESS reflected light than you want to.  You have to make sacrifices as an artist.  Model twenty percent of what you want to in the shadows!  It’s all about self control.  Resist the urge to exaggerate favorite details such as eyelashes.

Layer from softer pencils to harder.  The harder the pencil, the more light and precise you will be.  Compare every value.  Ask yourself, should this plane be lighter than this plane?

When rendering hair, think of it as a shining object, a single thing, not the millions of hair strands that it is.  When seen in light, it functions like a satin ribbon.   The hightlight actually runs in perpendicular to the way hair grows.  Notice the hair in the piece below.

Study of a New York Woman, by Graydon Parrish

How to Paint Like the Masters, Part 4: The Rendering Continues

23 Monday Jan 2012

Posted by Jessica Libor in How To, Inspiration, Journeys

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advice for artists, art expert, artist bios, classical realism, drawing, drawing beautifully, education in new york, emerging artist, emerging artists, how to be a skilled artist, how to be an artist, how to draw, how to draw from the live model, how to paint like the masters, jacob collins, jessica libor, Joshua LaRock, new york academy of art, sketching, steven assael

To continue our journey towards a beautiful painting, we begin where we left off, while still rendering a drawing and getting the values correct.  Again, remember that with every finished drawing, painting in the correct value scale becomes easier.  Before we dive in again, I wanted to share with you some of the most inspiring drawings in a classical manner that I’ve seen.  Let these motivate you to continue!  Skill comes through correct instruction, desire, and a little bit of natural inclination.

Serena, by Jacob Collins, 2004

Inbal, by Joshua LaRock, 12"x14", 2007

As you are looking back and forth from the model to your paper, don’t worry about the midtones right now, they will figure themselves out.  Look at the shapes that the dark and light create.  Remember that you can’t create form by COPYING values, because our value range as artists is more limited than in real life.  You must compress the values to create something with sculptural integrity–like a block of marble.  Think about making it an experience of volume on the page.  Take big swaths with the chisel of your pencil.  When you do start to think about midtones, tread lightly!  The dark light is turning with the form until it kisses the shadow.  Every form goes through the same gradation of lights and darks.  It’s just how fast it goes through all the gradations.  In the light, the value changes are less than you think they should be.  Hairlines are a soft transition from skin tones.  If by the end of this drawing session, the form isn’t round enough, then the shadows need to be darker and the form light lighter.

Drawing by Steven Assael

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