Gaping at Gaudí - OR - If You Must Use Graphite to Transfer a Drawing - Here's How To Do It Safely


One has to go to all the way to Barcelona to see the work of Antoni Gaudi but it's worth it. Weeks ago I saw his Spanish Catalan Art Noveau Architecture for the first time. Wow.


That's me (lower right) gaping at the ceiling of Gaudi's unfinished masterpiece "Sagrada Familia" - under construction since 1882.

The interior of the church is open and accessible giving a spectacular view of the expansive forest-like interior. The use of external light through the stain glass windows and the 'Glory of God' window in the roof is ever changing and dynamic.


I am making a little 6"x9" painting of the following detail from Gaudi's work - an angel - to illustrate the use of graphite in transferring a drawing.

Normally I do not use graphite for archival reasons. It tends to "rise to the top" of an oil painting over the years and can unintentionally wreck the surface.

However, if you must - here's how I do it:


I never use tracing paper any more - I use acetate instead so I can see through it to correct lines if necessary during the painting process.

On the right you can see a graphite transfer sheet. It doesn't matter if it is homemade graphite paper or commercial - same thing. Even drawing on the canvas with a pencil....it's all the same when graphite is applied to a surface that will have oil paint over it.

I am putting this drawing under the imprimatura. (Over is OK too.)


This is a photo of the pad of Graphix Acetate I used. I often use different brands and weights of acetate.

I always use a fine point black Sharpie to draw on the acetate because nothing else will stick.


I always use clear acetate - never matte or frosted as it defeats the purpose of being able to see through it. Prepared Acetate comes in rolls (which are cheaper) and pads - I use both.

The .003 weight tears easily but wrinkles less.

The heavier .005 weight is stronger but doesn't always want to lie flat.


When the lines are transferred with graphite to the surface, I often use a dip pen and ink (as shown above) to re-draw those lines. I always use a warm color - this ink is orange (you can see it in the upper left hand corner).


To illustrate another way, I will finish drawing over the graphite lines with a fine point Sharpie in any warm color. Shown are orange, red, yellow ochre, and brown.


I finished the job with an orange fine point Sharpie. It is quicker and easier than using ink....but because it is oil based, it can smear if you "scrub" too hard when adding the imprimatura.

Water-based ink won't smear when it comes in contact with oil.


I use a kneaded rubber eraser to lift every speck of graphite from my surface - only the ink and/or Sharpie lines remain.

This is important as I do not want to wreck my work before I even begin.


Next, I add the imprimatura (raw umber mixed with Liquin). I could continue to work but I decided to block my corners and darken my edges and let it dry before the next stage.


Sometimes I forget to tell you the most basic thing I do....like blocking edges and corners as illustrated above.


I begin with a glaze of raw umber over all. And then I paint a mixture of two values of titanium white and raw umber onto the wet surface and begin to build the angel figure.


I finish the raw umber and white rendering the angel in situ. As you can see, I some of my lines "took a walk" - but I let it dry as is anyhow.

Next stage - I correct by laying my acetate drawing over the dry surface to see where I went wrong - so I could correct. I do NOT use graphite if I need to trace a line....at this stage I'd use a chalk (pastel) transfer paper.



This is the finished piece - an "oil sketch" of one of Gaudi's musical angels, 6"x 9" oil on panel. Maybe because it was raining, the different colors were easy to see.

Gaudi's angel was cement but had subtle colors...intentional pigmentation, air pollution...who knows? But I liked the play of warm and cool in his sculptural facade and added touches of red, yellow and blue in my oil sketch based on Gaudi's angel.
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I found that angel over the doors of Gaudi's "Sagrada Familia." This magnificent building is so huge and so ornate, my camera just couldn't capture the feeling of it.

Here are some more pictures I took that give you the flavor of some of his other amazing works:


He had a grand imagination and developed his own distinct sculptural style.


He contrived highly original designs – irregular and fantastically intricate.


Gaudí's architecture is a total integration of materials, processes and poetics. However, his originality was at first ridiculed by his peers.


"Gothic art is imperfect, it means to solve; it is the style of the compass, the formula of industrial repetition. Its stability is based on the permanent propping of abutments: it is a defective body that holds with support… gothic works produce maximum emotion when they are mutilated, covered with ivy and illuminated by the moon."
- Gaudí


His work is highly organic.


Gaudí, throughout his life, studied nature's angles and curves and incorporated them into his designs and mosaics.


This serpentine garden bench is oddly graceful (and uncomfortable).

"Those who look for the laws of Nature as a support for their new works collaborate with the Creator."
- Gaudí


Because of his rheumatism, the artist observed a strict vegetarian diet, used homeopathic drug therapy, underwent water therapy, and hiked regularly.


Gaudí was a devout Catholic, to the point that in his later years he abandoned secular work and devoted his life to Catholicism and his Sagrada Família.


In 1926 Gaudí (at the age of 73) was hit by a tram. Because of his ragged attire and empty pockets, many cab drivers refused to pick him up for fear that he would be unable to pay the fare.

He was eventually taken to a paupers' hospital in Barcelona.


Nobody recognized the injured artist until his friends found him the next day.


When they tried to move him into a nicer hospital, Gaudí refused, reportedly saying "I belong here among the poor."

He died three days later.


Gaudí constantly changed his mind and recreated his blueprints.


Completion of the "Sagrada Familía" is planned for 2026, the centennial of Gaudí's death.


Me again, taking pictures.


As time passed, Gaudí's work became more famous.


Gaudi did not like to have his picture taken - so this photo of him taken by Paul Audouard is very rare.


He stands as one of history's most original architects.

2011: The Chinese Year of the Rabbit


I love bunny rabbits.

The Chinese Year of the Rabbit is traditionally associated with home and family, artistic pursuits, diplomacy, and keeping the peace.

Therefore, 2011 is very likely to be a relatively calmer year than 2010 both on the world scene, as well as on a personal level.



And now it's almost time to say goodbye (and good riddance) to the feisty Year of the Tiger 2010.

On a National scale, the Tiger was often unpredictable, overwhelming and frustrating. It always felt like danger was just around the corner.


For example, the biggest lie of the Year of the Tiger was: "Government Takeover of Health Care"

This tiger-sized lie stuck like gorilla-glue.

Sadly we had to drop the "public option" concept that was derided as too much "government intrusion."

The bullies smelled opportunity and didn't let facts get in the way of a great punchline.


Is there any animal more gentle than a rabbit?

I am really looking forward to a saner, sweeter and kinder 2011.

Unexpected Art at a Shpping Mall Food Court


Like all beautiful art - this piece doesn't require a fancy "frame" to delight the soul.

Enjoy the season.

Imprimatura Basics


For starters, think of a brown paper bag...



Imprimatura is a term used in painting. It is an initial stain of color painted on a ground (like my gessoed canvas shown below).

It provides a painter with a transparent toned ground. I prefer to use the approximate color and value of a brown paper bag.



The term is Italian and literally means ¨first paint layer" and it helps the classical painter begin with a middle tone and then establish value relations from dark to light.

I cannot think of anything more impossible to paint on than a stark white canvas!



An imprimatura is usually made with an earth color - for a portrait I like to use Raw Umber mixed with Winsor-Newton's Liquin Medium.

Some people use turpentine + color but I prefer to seal the canvas with Liquin.

Note the cheap "hardware store" white britstle brush above...I "use 'em and then I lose 'em.".



The first layers of a painting establish value and composition, color comes much much later.

Here are some examples from the works of Rubens:


In his oil sketches, you can see the imprimatura underneath it all.


It is easy to see - especially in these works.


I once saw a show of his oil sketches at the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston and that is when I first understood the importance of the imprimatura.


The imprimatura is the "mother color" that makes it all hang together. The painting above appears to have a darker imprimature - and thus is a darker painting.


This painting bleow - I have not see the original - but it is a mini-lesson in how to (sometimes) underpaint paint dark areas and shadows.


All of the darks and shadow areas appear to have been painted in red - a clever way to make those areas luminous, warm and lively when overpainted.

Note that in a landscape, I'll often use an "earthy red" (or sometimes cadmium orange) as my imprimatura and allow that color to peek through the final layers of the painting.


Even in the Old Master's drawing, a toned paper is used....and it is just the color of a brown paper bag!

Many of my paintings at KarinWells.com begin with an imprimatura.

What The Heck Has Obama Done Co Far?



Three very clever, computer savvy and progressive young people have managed to do what the entire Democratic party could not do for the entire two years of its majority in Congress.



They have done, in one fell swoop, what President Obama himself could not managed to do despite having the bully pulpit from which to send any message he wanted to the American people.

Shavanna Miller, Will Carlough, and Richard Boenigk have put up a very simple, yet all-encompassing web site, aptly named, What the heck has Obama done so far.?

The site leads to a single major accomplishment of the Obama administration, with a link to an authentic source that explains the legislation in detail. One example reads: Tax cuts for up to 3.5 million small businesses to help pay for employee health care coverage.

The simplicity is what makes this site so effective. One accomplishment to a page, with its source link.

The reader then can click a button with a snarky remark, such as: "I'm Unimpressed, Big Deal, or What Else?" - and move to the next stated accomplishment and its source link.

Clearly expressed and well written, each accomplishment leads to another, and together they result in the most impressive array of legislation ever passed by a single president in his first two years in office in history.

You'll be amazed at how much has been done, despite more filibusters by the GOP than ever recorded in the US Senate by an opposition determined to block any progress by the new President from the day he took office.

Take a guess at how much Obama has done. You'll be wrong. He did far more than you can imagine.


When the Right Gets It Wrong: A Truly Brutal Election


Nice try Jon Stewart - but "Sanity" wasn't restored and our country failed to think outside of the FOX.


There is no doubt that Tuesday's results will make for even harder times for our country.

It is crazy making to realize just how extreme and misinformed much of the new Congress will be.


There is little reason to expect any useful legislation from the Tea Party-dominated House or the dysfunctional Senate.


Swing votes in the Senate have really troublesome names like Lieberman, Nelson, Manchin, and Pryor. In fact, this Congress will do damage to anything even remotely progressive.


The Republicans shrunk the first "stimulus" package and filled it with tax breaks, even as corporate Democrats helped them along, blocking any effort to restructure mortgages in bankruptcies, freeze foreclosures or force banks to lend money.


The election outcome was partially baked in early 2009, when the White House preemptively conceded on the scale and provisions of the stimulus package and chose to coddle the banks. To watch this unfold was simply maddening.


Making matters worse were other factors. Among the most damaging were the actions of the conservative majority on the Supreme Court, which seemed energized by the new President, and took the radical step of rehearing a campaign finance case — now known forever as Citizens United.


In ruling 5-4 that corporations have the right to spend unlimited amounts of money for and against candidates, the Court transformed the electoral landscape in a way potentially more profound than its 5-4 ruling that seated George W. Bush as president.

As many predicted, the Citizens United ruling unleashed the greatest wave of corporate spending in history.


In an astonishing turn of events, the right wing was able to kill — essentially murder in public view — the organization that registered millions of poor and working class African-American and Hispanic voters in the last six years.


I am speaking of ACORN, of course. By editing video completely out of context, and using the right-wing media machine to perfection, Andrew Breitbart was able to convince the mainstream media and eventually Congress, that ACORN was an election-stealing organization that had no qualms giving advice to pimps on how to increase revenues.


Fulfilling Karl Rove's wildest dreams, Congress, including most Democrats, voted to block public funding for any of ACORN's laudable and effective housing or tax assistance programs, and ACORN died a quiet death. There would be no millions of new registrants.


Republicans walked away from any serious healthcare discussion - muttering bizarre comments about reforms "killing grandma" and setting up "death panels." It would have been laughable if it were not so utterly destructive.

FOX News misled and misinformed the American people on every issue, and effectively became the public face of the Republican Party.

How did we get to such a mess where climate contrarians attacking scientists and their work is not only acceptable, but helps win elections?


Glenn Beck's show became so toxic and spewed so much venom that one of his devoted fans took it upon himself to plot the execution of key leaders of the Tides Foundation and the ACLU, who had figured prominently in Beck's rants.


Fortunately, the madman (the fan, not Beck) was stopped before he accomplished his mission.

For those of us who had hopes that the Obama Administration could seize the moment and enact popular progressive changes, this is a bitter pill. And like many, we grieve at the lost opportunities.


But now we need to brush off the dust, suck it up, and plunge back into substantive fights.

Politics is not fair — indeed, U.S. elections are rigged in profound ways - but walking away is not an option.


Are you angry and exhausted at this point? I know I am.

But let us not forget that the values and ideals we fight for are greater than any one election. They still endure, and so must our fight.


So roll up your sleeves, we have a lot of work to do.

Vote on Tuesday, November 2nd


"If you cannot bring yourself to vote for the lesser of two evils - you'll get the greatest evil."
- Steve Baherman


This year, fewer than 40% of voting age Americans will actually vote.

A serious glitch, I think.

If you don't vote because you're trying to teach politicians a lesson, you're tragically misguided in your strategy. The very politicians you're trying to send a message to don't want you to vote. Since 1960, voting turnouts in mid-term elections are down significantly, and there's one reason: because of TV advertising.

Political TV advertising is designed to do only one thing: suppress the turnout of the opponent's supporters. If the TV ads can turn you off enough not to vote ("they're all bums") then their strategy has succeeded.

The astonishing thing is that voters haven't figured this out. As the scumminess and nastiness of campaigning and governing has escalated and the flakiness of candidates appears to have escalated as well, we've largely abdicated the high ground and permitted selfish partisans on both sides to hijack the system.

Voting is free. It's fairly fast. It doesn't make you responsible for the outcome, but it sure has an impact on what we have to live with going forward. The only thing that would make it better is free snacks.

Even if you're disgusted, vote. Vote for your least unfavorite choice. But go vote.