Showing posts with label water. Show all posts
Showing posts with label water. Show all posts

Friday, June 26, 2020

Ten tips to paint landscapes with watercolor


Ever wondered how to go about painting a watercolor landscape? Painting a watercolor landscape is about more than copying nature. You don't just want to show a mountain; you also want to capture a mood and really express how that gorgeous scenery makes you feel. Painting a watercolor landscape can definitely be daunting when an artist is just starting out with this medium, especially due to its fluidity and transparency. In this article, talented artist Dudi Berkowitz Chicago will take you through his complete process, one-step-at-a-time. He will also share some of his personal tips and tricks that allow him to create specific textures, depth and dimension.

The beginning of the landscape: Before starting to paint the landscape, Dudi Berkowitz Chicago recommends to test colors on a support other than the painting. In this way, it will be possible to have a more complete idea regarding their final form.

The recommended landscape theme: Landscapes represent one of the most common motifs for those starting out in the world of watercolor. They are highly recommended for their simplicity. This is largely due to the fact that they usually contain unspecific shapes, which do not require too much precision.

Start of the sketch in the landscapes: It is advisable to start from the horizon line, then you must sketch the largest elements such as mountains, rocks, trees and vegetation. The next step is to paint the sky. For this, the upper part of the plane of the painting can be painted in dark blue and the color is degraded until it reaches the lightest blue that must be approaching the horizon.

Color in landscapes: If the landscape has a superposition of colors, the warmest color must always be applied first. Then continue with this premise successively.

Monday, June 24, 2019

The Sculpting Skills of The Naive Art Painter David Berkowitz Chicago


The naive art painter, David Berkowitz Chicago has exhibited his art in almost every big art center, including Vienna, Paris, Rome, London New York, Shanghai, Miami, and many others. He decided to become an artist at a young age. He listened to himself and, fortunately, had support from his close ones. He assumed that the quality of work and dedication must yield some results, so he searched for interesting competitions and participated in them.

Today, David Berkowitz Chicago, who is a School of Art Institute of Chicago graduate, is equally known for his sculpting and painting skills. At the same time, he is equally impressed with drawing and sculpting, which are constantly interwoven. When he satisfies his hunger for painting he moves to sculpt and vice versa. Both painting and sculpting are basin media and visual expression media, only drawing is defined by two coordinates, while the sculpture is drawn in a three-dimensional space.

Thursday, February 7, 2019

David Berkowitz Chicago Portrays Strength and Frailty

Chicago based artist David Berkowitz is an established painter with a peculiar style that is easy to recognize, and impossible not to love. This contemporary painter is distinguished by an original and unmistakable stylistic independence. The main motives in David Berkowitz’s work are nature and man. Somehow they complement each other so perfectly, that at times you simply can’t tell where one begins and the other ends. Clarity and precision, great use of light and unique technique, are just some of the things that make David Berkowitz Chicago one of the greatest contemporary painters.



His latest exhibition consists of a series of self-portraits, portraits, and human body display. In his work, David Berkowitz Chicago brings an inherent feeling. The suffering of man and nature is his preoccupation and eternal inspiration. In his compositions, he brings the relationship and contrast, the struggle of human toughness and the agility of nature, in balance. The body, with a lot of power, is often put in an unimaginable position, but it is still null and void compared to something higher. Therefore, his works are calm and serene.

Through the work of David Berkowitz Chicago, you can feel the strength of the muscles and the voice. It is possible to hear the cry and then stand before the silent photograph. And while you’re still hearing it inside your head, you’ll notice water. The artist depicts divine walking on the surface, while the water is intact, like glass. It mirrors the reality that brings balance and symmetry. He becomes one with the water, as he springs from it, and pounds in it. When he breaks the surface, he feels helpless and is reduced to a mirror that blurts the artistic moment. As a contrast to the above, the paintings also show his other side, his perfection that defies the weight of the human body.


The human body is strong but fragile. It's powerful but null and void. It is the place where the contradictions that are perfectly harmonized meet so that they make the ideal state. The body is a fascination and a medium in which artists achieve almost unimaginable things. David Berkowitz Chicago depicts the human body in his paintings, reshaping it to the most basic and most vulnerable form.

Tips for Mixing Grays, Mid-tones, and Shadows Accurately

  One of the easiest and most valuable tools for accurately mixing grays is the color wheel. This one, as mentioned in David Berkowitz Chica...