Plein air painting
Plein air painting is about leaving the four walls of your studio behind and experiencing painting and drawing in the landscape. The practice goes back for centuries but was truly made into an art form by the French Impressionists. Their desire to paint light and its changing, ephemeral qualities, coupled with the creation of transportable paint tubes and the box easelâthe precursor to the plein air easels of todayâallowed artists the freedom to paint âen plein air,â which is the French expression for âin the open”. Sketches allow painters to improve the overall design of a painting and quickly capture color notes in the landscape. A plein air painter can also use photographs to help design a painting, though they usually
come into play after the artist has left the outdoor painting site for the comforts of the studio. An artist often utilizes photographs to capture detailsâlike the particular texture of grass or the shape of a
river bendâbut most painters stay away from using photographs for color and value indicators.Today, plein air painting is a flourishing trend in our art world. Artists come together for âpaint outâ excursions, workshops devoted to the practice occur all year-round and coast to coast, and landscape painters are finding that plein air painting is as rewarding and powerful an experience as it was for the first plein air painters all those years ago.