Setting up a still life to work from

Setting up a still life to work from

If you're working from life, as we all will be at different points during this course, there are various things to think about which will affect the outcome of your painting.

Before you gather several objects to arrange ask yourself what interests you most about painting right now, and secondly still life as a subject.

Is it dramatic shapes? Colour? Relationships or emotions? The contrast of forms? Realism? Abstraction? Memory? Meaning? Or something else? Or a combination of a few of these?

What can you find around your home that can suggest or support those themes?

What you might find as you start arranging things is that you discover the things you thought were of primary importance may shift slightly. For example, in this video I notice some smaller vessels on a shelf behind what I am arranging and while I think I say that I don't plan on including those, I remember being struck by the difference in scale within a relatively small picture plane. I made a mental note this is something I'd like to play with in the future.

If you have trouble opening the YouTube video you can click the link below

Spesl - Setting up a still life.mp4 (2.99 GB)

As you add and subtract objects while arranging a still life consider some of these things:

  • varying the height of objects

  • raising and lowering your eye level as you look at what you're setting up. This could mean that you decide to set up on a platform higher than your work surface, perhaps a board on some books or a box; or a lower surface like a chair with a board on top so that you can look down on it

  • a light colour underneath your objects if you're interested in shadow colour

  • bright or dark colours behind or under for drama and to throw colours into relief

  • are you looking for a gentle calmness or a bold statement or somewhere in between?

  • is the relationship between the objects important to you?

  • could the negative shape between objects be more interesting?

  • if space is a challenge arrange a line of objects on either side of you and work on one at a time, altering their placement in your painting. If this is the case then a sketch plan or drawing in chalk on your background would be helpful

  • if space is in plentiful supply you could set up something elaborate to choose a variety of compositions from that could work well as a series

  • you could take photos of setups you create to assess compositions and to work from or shots of found scenarios elsewhere to work from

How do you tend to set up a still life? Share your thoughts in the comments :)

Experimental Still Life - Self-Paced

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Module 1 - Welcome & Let's draw

  • Housekeeping3
  • Module Plan
  • Materials list
  • Types of acrylic paint5
  • Resources - tips- reading2
  • Artist Mindset and Meditation9
  • What inspires you right now?15
  • Setting up a still life to work from7
  • Gather Objects5
  • Drawing Exercises - part one10
  • More drawing exercises - part two12
  • The value of reflecting on your work6
  • Bonus video 1
  • Bonus Video 2
  • Bonus Video 35
  • Bonus video 4

Module 2 - Composition and Colour

  • Module Plan6
  • Principles and design elements cheat sheet 1
  • Composition - films to watch and a warm up exercise4
  • Exercise 1 - Composing with values6
  • Exercise 2 - assessing values using colourful paintings8
  • Colour notes5
  • Exercise 3, 4, 5 and 6 - colour mixing and value studies2
  • Exercise 7 - painting with complementary colours9
  • Exercise 8 - spatial awareness with colour
  • Bonus video - painting without black3
  • Painting with principles and elements in mind5
  • Exercise 9 - make a painting2
  • Preparing for module 3
  • Bonus videos
  • Bonus Video 1
  • Bonus Video 2
  • Bonus Video 3
  • Bonus Video 4

Module 3 - Let's explore

  • Module Plan
  • Exercise 1 and 2 - backgrounds, lines and shapes
  • Exercise 3, 4 and 5 - using a Gelli plate and monoprinting5
  • Exercise 6 - collage5
  • Exercise 7, 8 and 9 - three ways of painting on paper 1
  • Exercise 10 - painting without brushes1
  • Exercise 11 - painting on cardboard 2
  • Exercise 12 - giant sketch painting3
  • Exercise 13, 14 and 15 - painting over different values of background3
  • Bonus demo - painting over an interesting background
  • Preparing for module 44
  • Bonus Video 1
  • Bonus Video 2
  • Bonus Video 3
  • Bonus Video 4

Module 4 - Everyone can paint a lemon

  • Module Plan
  • Introduction
  • Inspiring paintings
  • Exercise 1 - how will you paint a lemon?
  • Exercise 2 - painting the light3
  • Exercise 3 - still life as self portrait4
  • Exercise 4 - the hidden beauty of the mundane
  • Exercise 5 - the feeling of flowers1
  • Exercise 6 - still life with views1
  • Exercise 7 - disrupted realism1
  • Exercise 8 - stylisation2
  • Process note - something to think about if you are already scaling up
  • Bonus Video 1
  • Bonus Video 2
  • Bonus Video 3
  • Bonus Video 4

Module 5 - Painting from the inside out

  • Module Plan
  • What does imagined still life look like?
  • Exercise 1 - paint what emerges 2
  • Exercise 2 - visions of vessels 2
  • Edited live session where I worked on exercise 2
  • Exercise 3 - floral adventure
  • Exercise 4 - memory game
  • Optional project - creating a mini series
  • An edited Q+ A from 2021
  • Exercise 5 - Bringing it all together
  • Bonus Video 1
  • Bonus Video 2
  • Bonus Video 3
  • Bonus Video 4

Module 6 - Let's abstract

  • Overview
  • A film to watch and Exercise 1 - where do you see abstraction in your work now?
  • Exercise 2 - continue to work out what abstraction for you is by painting from life
  • Exercise 3 - printing with the Gelli plate in an abstract way
  • Exercise 4 - the spaces in between2
  • Exercise 5 - sophisticated abstraction1
  • Exercise 6 - let yourself be loose
  • Exercise 7- line more than anything
  • Exercise 8 - organic abstraction
  • Exercise 9 - if colour were the main subject2
  • Abstract Painting with Sally-Anne Ashley1
  • Bonus Video 1
  • Bonus Video 2
  • Bonus Video 3
  • Bonus Video 4

Module 7 - Let's Go Big!

  • Module Plan
  • Inspiration
  • Exercise 1 - analyse, analyse
  • Priming your large surfaces
  • Planning your colour palette and paintings
  • Exercises 2 and 3 - warm up to scaling up2
  • Exercise 4 - covering large surfaces in different ways
  • Exercise 5 - intuitive painting on an old canvas
  • Exercise 6 - painting on raw canvas
  • Exercise 7 - blind painting as the starting point
  • Exercise 8 - make the biggest painting you can in a week3
  • Starting on a few paintings or even a series...
  • The messy middle
  • Nearing the end?
  • Bonus Videos

Module 8 - Practical Tips

  • Before you varnish - photograph your work
  • Do you want to make prints of your work?
  • Varnishing
  • Framing
  • Studio and business practice
  • Making money from your work
  • Final Thoughts