Painting Boats and Harbors
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About this ebook
Seasoned artists and novices alike will appreciate the author's simple, yet authoritative style. In clear, nontechnical language, he discusses the structure of boats, offers advice on choosing a subject to paint, and shows how to avoid the pitfalls that can await painters of the sea. On its own, or as a companion volume to Ballinger's Painting Surf and Sea, this volume will inspire any artist with the desire to produce beautiful seascapes. Includes eighty-five black-and-white illustrations and an eight-page insert with nine color illustrations.
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Reviews for Painting Boats and Harbors
4 ratings1 review
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5It is an older book, which means that the illustrations are in monocolour, which detracts quite a bit, but there are many older books with such illustrations, and the text tends to make up for it (eg Carlsson). I thought that, given it was about boats, there could have been much more useful information about boats and painting of them, but it was pretty general. Also, knowledge about paints has gone beyond what was known at this time. He recommends Zinc White, but it is now known that this cracks badly and should be avoided in oil paints (it is ok for water media). Also he uses Alizarin Crimson as it is 'more permanent that Rose Madder'. In fact it is now known that it is even more fugitive than the Rose Madder Genuine that it was designed to replace, and should be avoided altogether.
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Book preview
Painting Boats and Harbors - Harry R. Ballinger
Index
Introduction
EVERY TIME I SEE A HARBOR SCENE painted by an inexperienced artist, in which the boats look like floating bungalows and the sea gulls resemble mosquitoes or fat pigeons, I feel upset and wish that I could do something to help him do a more professional job.
Harbor scenes are fascinating to paint and make the finest kind of pictures if they are done well. Most people, when painting a harbor, will settle for a boat or two moored to what is supposed to be a wharf, with a few misshapen figures sometimes thrown in for good measure. They should be able to do much better than that.
When one is painting a harbor it is a good plan to show some of the action that is taking place. Boats should occasionally be painted under way — either coming in to dock or starting out to sea. It is also fun to try to paint the scene in different light effects and moods.
Boats and harbors are probably more difficult to paint than surf scenes; it is much harder to draw a boat than a wave. After all, moving water isn’t too difficult to paint if you understand the principles that govern its movement, but boats have to be drawn correctly in order to look convincing. The artist has to understand their general contours and has to make them look as though they were in the water, not just sitting on top of it.
Last year, when I wrote Painting Surf and Sea,¹ I felt that it should have a companion volume, for I think that most of us who love the sea also have a deep affection for boats and harbors. In any event, marine painters should be able to paint boats as readily as they portray surf and open sea for they are all marine subjects and equally interesting.
It isn’t easy to paint boats. There is a lot of difficult drawing involved. Also, an artist painting around a harbor is liable to run into all kinds of complications before he can finish his picture. Boats have an unpleasant habit of going to sea the minute you start painting them. It helps, therefore, to know as much as possible about them in order to be able to sketch them in rapidly before they get away from you. Then, too, the tide is constantly rising or falling. A boat that looms up majestically at a wharf when you start to paint it sometimes ends up down in a hollow before you can finish it — or else it completely disappears behind the wharf. There are other hazards often encountered when painting harbors, such as the bystanders who like to watch you paint and the fishermen’s big cars that take up so much of the foreground that it is difficult to see the boats!
In order to help the painter through these initial difficulties, I have tried to include in this book all the information that I could. It is written in simple, non-technical language that can easily be understood by the amateur artist or student. I have also included a great many tips on picturemaking that I have picked up the hard way, after many years of painting on the waterfront.
In my own work, I have always preferred the sturdy picturesqueness of the plebeian working boats to the yachts or pleasure craft, which seem a little too effeminate to suit me. Most of this book, therefore, deals with fishing boats, draggers, lobster boats and the more colorful types of sailing and cargo-carrying vessels which, while beat-up in appearance, are much more interesting to paint. In addition to picturing and talking about some of the more familiar types of vessels, I have touched on ships at sea and some wrecks along the coast.
In order to make this a comprehensive book on marine painting, I have had to repeat some of the information on art materials and equipment, composition and painting techniques that appears in my first book, Painting Surf and Sea. I hope that readers forgive me for restating a number of these ideas. I do so only because I consider this information vitally important for any kind of successful painting.
Ever since I was a youngster I have preferred books that were full of pictures — in fact, the more the merrier. As you will see, this book has been profusely illustrated for the benefit of those kindred souls who would rather look at pictures than read the text. Even if you dislike wading through pages of print, you can still learn a lot about painting boats and harbors simply by studying the pictures.
Here, then, is a book that contains all the information that has helped me with my own boat and harbor scenes and that will, I hope, be of some value to you. If any of the ideas contained in this book make it easier for you to do a more professional job, I shall be very happy.
HARRY R. BALLINGER
New Hartford, Connecticut
1: Oil Painting Equipment
ALTHOUGH I HAVE PAINTED a great many watercolors in my life, I still consider oils a much easier and more flexible medium in which to work. The instructions in this book will be based on painting in oil, and I will try to give you all the information at my disposal to help you handle this medium in a professional manner.
Some artists and many students think that they have to paint in watercolors for years before they acquire sufficient skill to work in oils. This assumption has always seemed absurd to me, for there is no medium as easy to work in as oil. You can make changes and repaint the picture with the greatest of ease if you are using oil, while in watercolor you are in trouble if a single wash goes wrong.
Painting in oil isn’t like drawing with a pencil. Your brush strokes should be broad and strong, so accustom yourself to working on a fairly large scale from the start.
For the benefit of those who have had no previous experience with oil painting, I will list the necessary equipment for out-of-door painting.
You will need a sketchbox to carry your brushes and paints. A wooden box 12 x 16 inches is a good size, although you can use a 16 x 20 inch box if