Wet Toes

Filed under: Inspiration — jpohl at 10:58 am on Sunday, September 18, 2005
Egg Tempera painting by Koo Shandler
Portrait by Koo Shadler, Egg Tempera

egg tempera painting by gale bunting
Blood Root by Gale Bunting, Egg Tempera

If you’ve been following along you may have read that I’ve begun working in egg tempera, something I started thinking about before the birth of my son, Conor, a little over a year ago. My decisons to put my work in oil on hold and explore egg tempera were mainly for health reasons, but as I find my way, I’ve become smitten with the possibilites.

It is more archival than oil paint, and the colours will stay true and bright for centuries, but it can be a difficult, slow and frustrating medium. It didn’t take long to understand why it is generally not recommended for beginners, but when I see the quality of light in the work of artists like Koo Shadler and Gail Bunting I have all the inspiration I need to continue. Done badly, egg tempera paintings can be… uhm, boring, but when it is done well, there is a light and luminosity unlike any that can be found in other media. I have a huge learning curve ahead of me, but it’s one that excites and energizes me despite all sleep deprivation. A small book by Daniel V. Thompson, The Practice of Egg Tempera (1936) is proving invaluable. I would also love to add Cennini’s fifteenth century handbook Il Libro dell’ Arte to my reference library, but if –like me– you are saving up for art supplies and have a family to feed, there is also an online version.

Now if only I could transport myself to a museum and see a Botticelli in the flesh today, but that kind of inspiration will have to wait….

2 Comments »

171

Comment by Kevin Muerphy

September 28, 2005 @ 5:29 am

Congrats on the egg temperas. I’ve been thinking about if for years, but I’m sceered. K

Comment by Rick

March 20, 2006 @ 12:12 am

I teach at Atlanta College of Art, which is on the same campus as the High Museum; Andrew Wyeth has a beautiful exhibition there that is about to come down after a very nice run. His egg tempera pieces glow with an irridescense that can’t be described…you must see them in person to appreciate the subtlety and the detail. Amazing, inspiring, and humbling. Makes me want to tackle the medium as well.

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