Q: I use an acetate film to protect my watercolors when I
present them to clients and when I store them. Often, I use Windex to
clean off fingerprints on the acetate. Do the chemicals in the Windex
pose any problems to the pigments on the paper?
Continue reading "Using Windex on Acetate Film" »
Q: I currently keep all of my finished oil and pastel paintings
in my Manhattan studio. In the winter, the studio gets very hot because
I can't control the heat. Can the extreme temperature hurt my paintings?
Continue reading "Extreme Studio Temperatures" »
As many visitors have already discovered, the American Artist online presence is currently transitioning to a new format. The new American Artist community site is already home to the American Artist forums, and fresh online editorial content is being shifted there as well. The content previously posted here can now be found in a collection of newly created blogs, brought to you by the editors of the American Artist family of publications.
Visit here for new content.
Continue reading "Visit the American Artist Community Site For New Editorial Content" »
Q: Is it possible to reuse thinner or turpentine?
Continue reading "Reusing Thinner" »

Gainesville, Florida, artist Marion W. Hylton is adept at oil, masterful in watercolor, and award-winning in pastel.
Continue reading "Marion W. Hylton: Moving Easily Among Media" »
Q: When I paint on paper with oil paints, it is all right to prime it with acrylic medium?
Continue reading "Using Oils on Paper" »
Q: I've heard that placing staples at an angle rather than
parallel to the weave gives greater strength to a stretched canvas. Is
this true?
Continue reading "Stapling Canvas" »
Q: I like the color of raw linen and the effect I get when
painting directly on it with oil colors, but I have been told that this
practice is problematic. Do I have to use primer and give up my
favorite way to paint?
Continue reading "Painting on Raw Linen" »

This video demonstrates how to incoporate scraping into your watercolor technique.
Cheap Joe's Lesson 19: Scraping
Continue reading "Cheap Joe's Classroom: Scraping" »
Visit the new Quick Sketches blog on the American Artist community site for information on noteworthy news items, exhibitions, award winners, and art supplies.
Continue reading "Visit the Quick Sketches Blog!" »
Q: I recently painted a watercolor that contained a larger,
dark-brownish area where I combined Van Dyke brown, burnt umber, and
green earth. In that spot, the paint took nearly two weeks to dry. What
do you think occurred?
Continue reading "Drying Time for Watercolors" »

This collection of work, on loan from The New Orleans Museum of Art, will be on display at the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts and features works from the 17th century through the mid-20th century that were spared from the devastating effects of 2005’s Hurricane Katrina .
Continue reading "Saved From the Storm at the Kalamazoo Institute of Arts" »
We have provided a list of links to online art resources that we think are helpful. You can also access these links in the Art Educators section of our website.
Continue reading "Useful Art Links" »
Q: What is a grisaille technique, and how can it help me?
Continue reading "Using a Grisaille" »

The Fine Arts Museum of San Francisco’s Legion of Honor will host this exhibition of work by master artist Leonardo da Vinci.
Continue reading "Leonardo da Vinci: Drawings From the Biblioteca Reale in Turin" »

This Toronto artist has spent the last three years exploring abstraction of the human figure, blending his classical training with a new approach.
Continue reading "Brian Smith: Figurative Abstracts" »
Check out the new Plein Air blog at the American Artist community site!
Continue reading "Visit the New Plein Air Blog" »
Q: I work primarily in watermedia and occasionally complete
paintings done entirely with acrylic washes on paper or illustration
board. How should I frame these works, and how does this method compare
to handling oil paintings over paper?
Continue reading "Framing Acrylic Paintings on Paper" »
Mark Leithauser collaborated with his brother, the poet Brad Leithauser, on a series of books that expanded his imaginative powers, leading him to consider a multitude of new subjects.
Continue reading "Drawings for Writings" »
Learn to draw the cube and you have a good introduction to basic perspective and to one of the geometric building blocks of all objects—including the human figure.
Continue reading "Drawing Basics: The Cube" »
Remember that adding detail puts emphasis on the focal point.
Continue reading "Focal Point" »

The Muscarelle Museum of Art, in Williamsburg, Virginia, will be the initial site for the national tour of the major exhibition of Old Master paintings.
Continue reading "The Dutch Italianates at the Muscarelle Museum of Art" »
American Artist recently annouced the winner of its 2008 Self-Portrait Competition. Here we list the prizes that the top winners recieved.
Continue reading "2008 Self-Portrait Competition Sponsors" »

James Toogood comments on Ross Sterling Turner's watercolor painting Fairylands, Bermuda.
Continue reading "Looking at Watercolors: "Fairylands, Bermuda" by Ross Sterling Turner" »
Detail disappears at night, so choose your detail with economy.
Continue reading "Oil Critique: "Midnight Snow"" »
Q: What are those strips of plastic on the back of my prestretched canvases?
Continue reading "Stretcher Keys" »
For more information and to enter the 2009 Cover Competition, please visit its new page here.
Continue reading "2009 Cover Competition " »
Remember that the light source will be the lightest value in a composition.
Continue reading "Light Sources and Value" »
Can I glue a failed oil painting that was done on linen onto a board (painting side down) in order to prepare the reverse side for use as a new painting surface? I would also like to do the same thing with a roll of triple lead-primed linen that is too slippery for my taste. What glue should I use to attach these oil-covered surfaces to a board?
Continue reading "Failed Paintings, Safety Tips, Comparing Masonite and Canvas" »

The first museum retrospective of work by George Tooker in three decades will be on display at the National Academy Museum and School of Fine Arts, in New York City, through January 4, 2009.
Continue reading "George Tooker at the National Academy Museum" »
Today, there are many online means of promoting and selling artwork, and many collectors go online before they head to their nearest gallery.
Read more Business of Art features.
Continue reading "Working as an Artist’s Assistant" »
Francis Di Fronzo stopped working with paint brushes to create his own technique of “tapping the landscape into existence.”
Continue reading "Open Spaces" »
John A. Parks examined the art of Giorgio Morandi in the December issue of American Artist. In one section, he asserted, "[His] paintings are a testimony to the act of something deeply contemplated. It is a kind of painting that has nothing to do with simply recording appearances." We asked Parks to expound upon this bold statement, and he responded with the following essay.
Continue reading "Morandi: Painting and Appearance in the 20th Century" »
Check out the new American Artist Plein Air blog on the American Artist online community website.
Continue reading "Check Out the New American Artist Plein Air Blog!" »

Varying degrees of softness in the edges can give more depth.
Continue reading "Oil Critique: "Bearded Iris"" »
Q: I know what type of medium to add if the paint coming out of the tube is too thick. But what if the paint is too thin?
Continue reading "Too-Thin Paints" »
New York watercolorist Frederick Wong shows artists how he responds directly to nature in his weekly informal plein air demonstrations in Central Park and also teaches his more methodical studio approach at The Art Students League of New York.
Continue reading "Watercolor Landscapes En Plein Air and in the Studio" »
Dent watercolor paper with the point at the opposite end of your brush to help you make thin, dark lines. If your brush end is too wide, you can use a toothpick or the end of a pin.
Continue reading "Dent the Paper for Thin, Dark Lines" »
Open spaces can relieve tension in a cramped composition.
Continue reading "Open Spaces" »

The natural cycle of water and its place in the landscape is the focus of this exhibition at the Irvine Museum, in Irvine, California.
Continue reading "All The Water That Will Ever Be, Is, Right Now at the Irvine Museum" »
Whether creating fine art or illustration, for Connecticut artist Bernie Fuchs—who boasts a long and successful career as an illustrator—it’s all the same. Either way, “I’m making a picture,” he explains.
Continue reading "Fine Art or Illustration?" »
The big granite surfaces in the foreground could be much more solid and read like granite if you tried doing them in layers.
Continue reading "Oil Critique: "Remnants of Autumn"" »
Q: I want to use oil glazes over a fast-drying underpainting,
and I was told that casein is a good medium to use. Is it wise to paint
on canvas this way?
Continue reading "Using Casein for Underpainting" »
Ninety percent of a painting is drawing.
Continue reading "Painting and Drawing" »
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