Went to the National Arts Club on Gramercy park South to see a demonstration of drawing with pastels by this year's Hall of Fame Honoree Bill Creevy. The demonstration involved copying a piece he had already completed and discussing the techniques he uses and some of the problems with pastels, all the different kinds of paper, the "dust", the difficulty in transporting the work because of the 'looseness' of the medium, more "dust". He is also a very opinionated guy, which made the day even better.
What he said and did:
From Leonardo DeVinci: 'If you can make an oval you can draw anything'.
He begins with white paper, some use black or colored paper, and works with cooling colors because of the subject: browns, ochers, reds. The subject is a building in a run down part of New Orleans. He just keeps making circles of different colors corresponding to the scene until he covers the entire paper.
Degas is his idol; he talked a lot about him. Degas' mother was American and Degas lived in New Orleans for awhile. Bill Creevy is from New Orleans.
Then he used a brush and some liquid to bring form to the work. He doesn't like calling it water coloring or painting. He talked about the differences between the Brush and Pencil artists. That some groups try to impose an hierarchy.
One of the remarkable things about the pastel show was the variety in the works on display. Many looked like oil paintings and some had a lighting effect that I wouldn't expect with pastels. I have photos of some but the reflection of the flash and the reflection from the glass over the pastel affects the photo.
Back to Bill. He talked about his own work and how he tries for some mystical, spiritual effect. Like the Hudson River School, whom he admires. The views of nature are more than 'a scene' for him and for me for that matter. There is a timeless, other, deeper quality than what is shown. Bill believes that what those painters had in the 19th Century and what was not uncommon among people of that time was a sense of pantheism. He believes people today are cynics.
He has written a number of books on pastel drawing and oil painting. His pastel book is 20 years old and still in print. It costs $25 and for every sale he gets a $1. He's learned about contracts since then.
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