The portraits that I include in this post are not from photos that I have taken. They are from the internet and were chosen purely for my own practice in learning how to paint a portrait. These “practice paintings” have not been done with an intention of selling them or distributing them in any way for market purposes. They are strictly for my learning how to paint.
The four paintings that I am including have been painted using Corel Painter 2020 with a Huion drawing tablet. I have been painting with Corel Painter, beginning with Corel Painter 11, with upgrades to the newest Corel Painter 2020. The Huion drawing tablet is a newer addition to my art as I used a Wacom tablet until January of 2020. Personally, I prefer the Huion as I can look at the tablet as I draw; with the Wacom there was a disconnect at having to look at the screen while drawing independently.
I began this series of portrait paintings to practice a technique of focusing on shapes, values, and colors in relationships to each other. In other words, I removed the “brain stress” of thinking in terms of objects, such as, eyes, nose, mouth, etc. It was remarkably freeing for me. Jamie Fraser of Outlander was my first attempt at this process.
This is my Huion drawing tablet with the reference photo of Jamie Fraser of Outlander and the painting of Jamie in mid process. The nearly finished project is above. I still have some tweaking to do on the hair.
The next painting project was a photo of Alexander Dreymon who plays Uhtred of Bebbanburg in The Last Kingdom. Again, my concentration was on shapes, values, and colors.
The painting of Uhtred is nearly completed below.
This painting is nearing completion. The skin tones need to be blended, for instance.
I find faces of all types to be interesting, so decided to try painting Ravn of The Last Kingdom. It’s not finished as you can see. It is a work (play) in process. On the right is the Huion tablet with reference photo and my painting in process beside it.
The painting on the left has the tatoos added, but is unfinished, obviously.
I was having such fun painting portraits using the new (to me) technique of freeing my brain that I decided to try something that would have put me into a brain freeze in the past. I don’t know the name of the model, but thought she was beautiful and loved her head scarf. The detail in the scarf would have been intimidating to me if I had not just concentrated on shapes, colors, and relationships. Again, the photo was from the internet.
In the finished painting on the left, I eliminated some of the white in the scarf. I loved the scarf in the original photo, but in my painting I wanted the focus to be on her eyes.