Making a Studio Landscape Look Like Plein Air

Making a Studio Landscape Look Like Plein Air

Class | Available

All Levels
11/15/2024-11/16/2024
9:00 AM-4:00 PM on Fri Sat
$220.00

Making a Studio Landscape Look Like Plein Air

Class | Available

Students will be able to make significant adjustments so that their landscapes painted from photos look as if they were done on location. Also, time will be given to show how to utilize or change the reference photo to make a better composition and a more interesting painting. Attention is given to the importance of choosing the angle at which you photograph your subject as well as weather conditions and time of day. Simplifying what you see is also important so we will begin with a painting of foggy atmospheric conditions (where the scene is automatically simplified) then move on to possibly a winter painting and how to handle snow, how to paint rocks or cliffs and finally how to deal with the challenges of mixing good greens. www.pursleyart.com

Craig Pursley

Craig started early in art, obtaining professional commissions at 14. He was chosen as Nebraska’s Outstanding Young Artist at 17 and the following year completed a large mural, which is still displayed in his high school.

While in college he worked as a composite artist for several law enforcement agencies including the F.B.I. and continued doing so after becoming an art teacher in Colorado.

In 1983, Craig moved to California where he began work as an illustrator for a major newspaper. During this time, he also achieved considerable notoriety as a sports artist for the California Angels, Topps Baseball Card Co., and Upper Deck Baseball Card Co.

In 2002, Craig and his wife, Julie, moved to New Hampshire where he paints the beauty of New England in addition to running the American Heritage Gallery of Art in the village of Bath.. He is a member of the The Portrait Society of America (who chose his portfolio as one of the top five in 2015) and Oil Painters of America (where he recently won second place in a national competition).

His work has been featured in American Art Collector, Southwest Art and International Artist magazines and can be seen in the National Baseball Hall of Fame, The Saint-Gaudens National Historic Site and The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library and Museum. His paintings are also in private collections from coast to coast and in Europe. He has won many national awards including two Best of Shows in 2015.  Recently, he was chosen by New Hampshire Magazine as “Best White Mountain Artist” and has two portraits on permanent display in the state house in Concord, NH.

Craig is represented by:
American Heritage Gallery, Bath, NH         
Tilting at Windmills, Manchester Center, VT
Art3Gallery, Manchester, NH                                         
Berkley Gallery, Warrenton, VA