mardi 19 décembre 2017

Why Many Artists Prefer To Create Acrylic Portrait Paintings Instead Of Oil

By Patrick Gray


If you have decided to have a formal portrait painted of you, your children, or your whole family, you want to choose the best artist you can afford. Many people believe these kinds of works have to be painted with oils in order to get a rich, textured picture that will last for generations. The portraitist you are using may prefer acrylic portrait paintings and suggest you choose this medium for your picture. There are many reasons to accept this recommendation.

As the client, it may not matter to you, but artists love acrylics because they dry quickly. If you allow your artist to use acrylics for your portrait, you might notice that she uses a spray water bottle regularly to keep the painting moist. She may also spray the palette to keep the paint from drying and to avoid having to remix.

Acrylics are extremely versatile. When you are meeting with an artist to discuss what you are looking for in your picture, she might ask you to consider a picture that looks more like a watercolor. She can add a little water to the acrylics to give the effect of watercolor without the translucent look. If you decide you like the idea of a watercolor, the artist may use an ink form of acrylics.

When you are really set on the look of oil, your artist can still use acrylics to achieve it. Your artist can choose a color palette that is more aligned with oils than acrylics. There are agents that can be added to the paint to thicken it and increase the drying time. This allows the artist to use different techniques and can give your picture the look of an old masterpiece.

Not all works are painted on canvas. The surfaces that will work with oils is limited, but acrylic paintings can be created on many different kinds of surfaces. These can include wood, cloth, paper, and many others. You might get a really interesting portrait by allowing the artist to use an alternative surface.

Because of its versatility, artists are drawn to acrylics and the possibilities they present. Works can replicate oil or watercolor. Artists can build paintings by adding layer after layer. Once acrylics dry on a surface they are not affected by the additional layers. Acrylics are water resistant, unlike water color. They dry quickly unlike oils, which may still be tacky after weeks on the canvas.

If you have concerns that works done in acrylic have a shorter lifespan than oils, your artist will probably tell you there is no evidence that acrylics will break down over time. Although they have only been commercially available for the last sixty years or so, even the oldest acrylic paintings are surviving very well.

In this digital age, people have their pictures plastered all over the place. Few of these are memorable. Even formal photographs, created by professional photographers, find it hard to compete with painted portraits. They command attention like no other medium.




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