Oil painter Jean Richard
Her landscapes can be seen locally at the Creek Village Gallery in downtown Woodstock. To highlight Richard’s remarkable work, a reception will be held there on Tuesday, July 14, 2015 between 7 p.m. and 9 p.m. All are welcome.
When did you take up the brush, Jean?
I got hooked in 1998. First I tried portraiture and still life ─ I was all over the place ─ then I discovered landscapes.
Do you work from photos?
At first I did but then I went “plein air”. When I paint from photos, shadows are black but outdoors there is colour there and you see it. Now if I work from a photo, I take artistic license and I feel that it’s really improved my work. But I love being outside where I can immerse myself in a scene while I’m painting it ─ seeing the daylight colours, hearing the birds. The same scene can be different every time I paint it depending on the weather or the light. It’s an amazing experience that I try to capture on canvas so that the viewer can feel it too.
Prince William, NB |
A lot of your work has an amazing softness.
It’s evolving. There’s a variance between my studio work where I have lots of time, therefore allowing more detail, and painting outdoors where I may only have a few hours and need to paint quickly and simply. But I do want my “plein air” work to be a bit looser ─ to have a more painterly quality. Maybe I fuss too much.
"I want to find a happy medium between looseness
and realism"
and realism"
Tell me a little about your technique. The rules you don’t follow.
I usually tint the canvas red or orange which brings out the greens in the landscape. You see some of the red and it makes a difference. (In the video below, Richard elaborates on her colour approach.) I draw with diluted paint and build up the thickness. Apart from that, I don’t really have a formula. The scene dictates how I will paint it and, mostly, it depends on the trees. Somehow it just comes together.
It all depends on the trees?
To a great extent, yes. The trees will dictate in what order I paint the scene, whether I start with the background, middle ground or foreground. Take this work on my easel for instance. I painted it last August on Grand Manan and I’m still working on a tree. On the island, most of the trees are crooked from the wind and salt and, here, the crookedness is off.
“I see the land differently now that I paint it.”
Have you had many shows?
My first solo show was about seven years ago. Then I did a show in Richibucto NB with my friend Chantal Richard and, more recently, another show with Chantal for the Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society’s fiftieth anniversary.
I’d say that was a great compliment for a landscape artist.
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