Abstract Watercolour Paint-along with Kerry Bennett

by Jacky Pett

Kerry Bennett paints abstracts of landscapes using blobs of paint and a straight edge, like a credit card. She showed us how this works, taking the paint from a dish onto the card, then scraping along lifting at times. Then she took a large brush, slightly damp to move it around a bit.

For those who work in watercolour, I think this was mainly a chance to try a different technique. I don’t, so it was fascinating to see not only the way Kerry approaches the abstract element, but also the tips and tricks she gave to solve problems watercolorists tackle routinely.

She showed lots of examples, most of which I thought were gorgeous. Especially the more monochrome and the one that looked like a highland loch

Not just watercolour paints

Use anything you like, including salt, clingfilm, ink, pen. It will depend what you see on how you want to develop and what tools to use.

You need a dark colour in the middle, so start with cobalt and burnt sienna. Also a cerulean and magenta. Take some of all together on your card and make the first marks.

Fill the bottom with some water and tilt to help the paint spread. This takes time. Use a normal brush to bring some of the other colours in, and move the paper around (tilt) till it’s dry enough to stay there.  Don’t let it puddle when flat or you get cauliflowers.(hard edges)

Paper has three stages of wetness:

  • Very wet smooth and glossy
  • Sheen, you can do wet into wet
  • Matt… too late. Dry completely and reset to add new wet in wet.

Putting salt on, grain by grain, gets a little bloom.

Alcohol gives a dandelion or lichen effect!

When dry enough, turn and wet the other half, and repeat tilting and playing with the paint effect. Decided she wanted a waterfall effect, so held board vertical and spray with water to make a gap in the colours that runs down the paper.

Use the edge of the card to create marks from any blobs of paint. If the paper is still wet you can do white marks, but judging the wetness is tricky.

I found it fascinating to watch how the colour spreads itself on wet paper. Kerry showed one example of ink on watercolour where the ink on water had made very realistic(if dense) foliage. A small spray bottle is essential equipment! Quink ink, or the one she uses has a white an purple vertical label and Japanese characters (or Chinese)

Quite often she ends up choosing the other way up for the sky from what she first thought!

The Paintalong

Joy Hatherell’s example

There were lots of people who showed their efforts on the screen, but I only managed to ‘collect’ one. I imagine those painting along had a lot of fun!

Kerry asked if we had a lot of water colourists. I’m not one, but seeing her paint like this, instead of the mostly neat and controlled watercolours that I’ve always thought ‘proper’, this approach I’d like to try.

Some more tips

  • Size 10 zero black velvet has a lovely tip. Use older brushes to wet your palette box, and the nice ones to take the paint from there.
  • Getting rid of cauliflowers: dampen, scrub and dab!
  • Use a hake brush to throughly wet the whole paper. Use long brush strokes.
  • Note that some colours e.g.  Paynes Grey dry a lot lighter than you expect.
  • Ink on dry paper you can’t lift off. On wet paper you can get rid of most, but it leaves a patch.

all images taken as screenshots, copyright remains with Kerry Bennett

Abstract Landscape in watercolour – update

Members looking forward to next week’s zoom demonstration have something extra to excite them!

Kerry Bennett will be demonstrating how to paint abstract landscapes – but with you painting along at home. 

Hopefully many of you will take part – this is a lot of fun to create and quite unpredictable.

Time permitting Kerry will also demonstrate creating landscapes using watercolour and black Chinese ink.

Joining details for the zoom meeting will be emailed to members this week.

REQUIREMENTS for the paint along

A3 or A4 watercolour paper, NOT cold pressed

A credit card or a piece of stiff plastic.

A water spray bottle

Watercolour in tubes  between 3 or 4 colours.  Pans will not really work well for this as what is needed is a thick blob of paint to scrape on the paper, but if you can create a thick paste from the pans it will be okay.

A large brush for wetting the paper.  

A board a little bigger than the paper and masking tape to tape all 4 sides down.

A hairdryer, or hot air gun.  If you want you can also use other mediums, like white gouache, fine salt, a fine tip ink pen.

Kitchen towel and/or cloths.

2 containers of water and plenty of creative imagination.

Juggling all this and our screens might prove challenging for some of us!