Some are hand-painted, some are totally digital, while some are hand-painted/drawn with digital enhancements done later. Chandra Bhanu Gupta on Tumblr 'Like' Chandra Bhanu's Art on Facebook

Monday, December 26, 2011

Looking at the shadow


























Sometimes we tend to look at some shaded areas of the past. We feel nostalgic for something we could not make our own. For sometime we turn back to live in the past. It is an inner feeling which also makes us strong for the future. Basically we get very few of what we long for. We also tend to derive lessons out of it. Again we come back and carry on with the present.

If you like this post, then please keep a one-line message below. That will give me more inspiration to draw and paint. Thank you! Subscribe to Beautiful and Sublime by Email Subscribe in a reader

Monday, December 19, 2011

Ethereal Beauty































This has been done with watercolour and pen on paper. I tried to bring the ethereal effect which sets our minds free and gives us an expansive, eternal feeling. Now it is up to the viewer to decide how far I have been successful. Subscribe to Beautiful and Sublime by Email Subscribe in a reader

Friday, December 16, 2011

Lady Resting






















This is actually painted from real life - my wife was resting and I liked the pose. I had to do it in a great hurry as she might have turned unknowingly the other way at any moment. So I could not go into much details. Still the picture satisfied me a lot, and I thought I should share it with my viewers. Your opinion is my reward. Subscribe to Beautiful and Sublime by Email Subscribe in a reader

Thursday, December 8, 2011

At Home


























For a change, this one has been made in black and white. The picture depicts the most secure, most private corner of her room where she wishes to retire at the end of the day, and have some peaceful time of her own. Subscribe to Beautiful and Sublime by Email Subscribe in a reader

Saturday, December 3, 2011

A few words

I am trying my best to coat my art with the glorious, romantic feeling of the past, when life was a poetry in motion. The mundane necessities of life has always to be balanced with beauty, aesthetics and an eternal feeling for the sublime. That gives life the silken touch it needs to make it worth carrying forward.

Figure art, nature in the form of landscapes and still life pictures are the manifestations of my feelings and consciousness. Beauty gives the most wonderous and hopeful touch to every creation of God. Be it the shepherdess of the hills, the ponderous lady, the lady with a broom, the sensual maiden, the lady buying vegetables, the one carrying a bucket of water, the late evening glow or the handmade rod bender - they all are symbols of beauty, patience, hope and strength.

Coming back to the material part, even a single pencil stroke on a piece of paper constitutes art. It is up to the vision of the viewer to see it, feel it and hold it in his heart forever.

If you like my art, my philosophy, please try and help to spread it! Thank you!!!!!

If you wish, you may contact me and stay in touch. Thanking you once again. Subscribe to Beautiful and Sublime by Email Subscribe in a reader

A few things about colours and painting pictures

Here I am discussing some of my findings while painting pictures. Hope students of fine art find them interesting, even if not very academic. These are just a few tips worth trying, though some may sound unconventional.

First imagine your picture in monochrome colour. That will help you to decide which particular colour will play the most important role in the painting you are about to do. That particular colour is the one that comes to your mind first when you try to visualize your painting in colour.

A very clear concept about complementary colours is necessary to give your painting a striking visual effect. My experience with colours show that red and blue are complementary colours. Violet and orange, reddish-violet and yellowish-white, yellowish-white and light-blue, brown and prussian-bluish-brown are some other complimentary colours. By placing complementary colours side by side, the visual effect of the painting can be increased many times.

Now a few words about warm and cool colours. Red, orange, yellow and brown are warm colours that evoke excitement. It should be mentioned here that diagonal lines also evoke excitement, whereas horizontal lines evoke tranquility. Also curved lines evoke love and affection. Upward brush strokes evoke excitement, downward brush strokes evoke tranquility. Warm colours catch the eyes first. Blue, green and violet are cool colours, though violet, with varying proportions of red, can, at times, work as a warm colour, as it contains red in it.

Warm colours tend to bring an object near, whereas cool colours push an object to the distance. Thus cool colours have a retreating effect. So the foreground of a picture should be in warm colours and the background in cool colours. This is the basic rule.

Complimentary colours can be mixed together to produce various types of grey colours. Grey colours, when placed near any of its constituent colours, give a good visual effect. Grey colours can also be used to reduce the effect of primary colours.

Shadows mean areas where there is less light. Proper colouring of shadow areas is very important. Colours of shadows also depict the time of the day.
In the morning shadows have a bluish-grey tinge. Morning light is slightly blue in colour.
Bright sunlight, as found during the afternoon, is yellowish white in colour. Afternoon shadows are bluish-violet in colour.
Evening light has an orange tinge and evening shadows have a reddish-violet colour. Length of the shadow also indicates the time of the day.

A coloured object reflects its own colour. So it tends to throw light of its own colour. This has to be kept in mind while handling light and shades. Primarily shadows tend to have some blue in it mixed with some other colour(s).

Borrow some colour from the main object of the picture and use it in a nearby area of the picture. This mostly gives a very good visual effect.

Pencil-sketch is the best thing to keep in constant touch, even if one fails to sit with brush and paints. After a long lapse, it is pencil sketching that will again bring back the touch. Every fine artist must do at least one pencil sketch every day.

Hope to share more of my experiences with pencil, pen, brush and paints again. Subscribe to Beautiful and Sublime by Email Subscribe in a reader

Thursday, December 1, 2011

Privacy Series

To get a free high resolution copy of this picture which you can yourself get printed and framed, contact me through my contact page. Subscribe to Beautiful and Sublime by Email Subscribe in a reader