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Home » Pastel Portrait Demonstration of Robert Dinero
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Pastel Portrait Demonstration of Robert Dinero

May 25, 2010 by Ralph S 7 Comments

About Gerard Mineo

Gerard is a 50 year old artist from France and has been interested in art since 1983. After studying architecture for 4 years, he decided it wasn’t his calling in life, so he devoted his life to painting portraits.

Gerard fell in love with Pastels when he was 16 years old after seeing the work of an Italian portrait artist. After several years of training from photos and live models, Gerard put all his effort into becoming the amazing professional artist that you see today.

You can learn more about Gerard by visiting his website at the Address Below:

https://www.pastel-portraits.com


Step by Step Pastel Portrait Demonstration of Robert De Niro

‘This is a step by step demonstration of my personal progression in the making of a portrait from a photograph. Forget all you know about oil painting technique if you have some, pastel painting steps are totally different. You can work the way you like, you don’t have to care about oil constraints. One rule, work the very highlights at the end, and sometimes, over the sprayed artwork. Beware, unlike oil painting, It is not easy to cover very dark areas with light colors. As information, I give the closest Rembrandt (R), Sennelier (Sen), Vang (V) or Quentin Latour (QL) , reference for any color I use when it is possible, to allow artists to use their traditional palette, but it will be only an approximation. I remind you, most of the colors I use are home made.

Robert Dinero Pastel Drawing Demonstration Portrait Pastel Drawing Tutorial
Start with a sketch on a 18′ x 25′ velour paper with a Koh-I-Noor Sepia hell lead. It is very important to catch the most likeness possible at this stage so you ‘ll just concentrate yourself on the colors and value in the next steps. Work slightly, no heavy strokes that would mark the paper. With the flesh tone 2, (~R.339.5+R.409.8) or (~Sen.71) Or (~QL.69) cover all the skin area and start the background around the face with a grey-green tone (~R.709.7). You’ll always work the background and the portrait at the same time, it is important for a constant evaluation of the color balance.
Pastels Portrait Tutorial Dinero
State the shadows and the transition halftones first with Light Shadow tone (~QL.122). Don’y worry with details here. Use a dark grey-blue (~R.727.3) for the jacket. White area, here the collar, will be filled at the end to keep it clean. Accentuate the shadows in the darkest parts of the face, and state the base for the beard with Medium Shadow tone (~R.408.3+R.538.7) . Mark also the hair root that will make the transition to black hair. You can darken the eyes at this step if you want.
Here, warm the central part of the face with Orange tone (~R.411.8). Don’t cover evenly, just let the basic tone come out here and there. This will avoid a stiff like painting. The lower part of the face is alway cooler than the rest, especially on men’s portraits. Add a touch of Neutral1 (~R.538.7+R.709.7)on the beard and on the eyes’s shadow to cool it and on shadowed area of the neck. Here I have added a touch in the background as well.
I go on cooling on a larger area of the lower part of the face, up to the cheeks, suggesting the beard beneath the surface of the skin and slightly over the eyes and the temple’s hair with the Neutral tone2 (~R.538.8+R.709.7). Using the same tone, mark the light shadows on the shirt, add some transitions in the background using a light brown (~R.409.8) Using a Koh-I-Noor Sepia dark lead, key in the darks to define some details. You can start showing some hair at its root and on the beard and mustache.
Now state the evenly lightened areas of the picture, use Flesh tone 2 (~R.339.5+R.409.9) to state them. Notice how this bring some relief to the tip of the nose. Add some spots of blue-green (~R.640.8+R.709.8) in the background to contrast with the overalls warm flesh tone. Before going any further with the face, lets paint the hair. Use Brown tone (~R.409.3) for the base and add a touch of dark grey-blue (~R.727.3), same thing for the jacket.
Using black tone, darken slightly the shadows areas and the jacket, mark the hair in the beard and mustache and keep some light part as a base for up coming grey hair. Since the previous step, the background need some stronger values. Here use a dark grey-green (~R.709.3) over and on the left shoulder to fade it with the background. Add some previous colors to the background.
Unlike Oil painting, each time you add a layer, you cover partially the one underneath and don’t mix with it, so at this point, we need to enhance the previous Orange tone and the new beard area. With the Light tone (~R.409.9), state the highlights all over the face. Give some details to the ear, the forehead and lines here and there by adding a dark reddish tone with a Conte stick #2453. We must see the blood color through the thinest part of the ear.
Now, put the grey hair, use a 1 inch edge of a very light grey-green (~R.709.9), you can break your stick in 2 half circles to get a sharp edge. You must draw the hair in full strokes, don’t hesitate or stop in the middle of a reflection and draw again, this would ruin the effect. Avoid the use of the pastel tip, remember, use an edge. Add black on beard, mustache, eyes, eyebrows. Use the Conte Pierre Noire for the thinest details. Draw on the grey hair on the beard and the mustache, here you can use a sharpened Carre Conte white 2b. Add also some pure white hair on temples. Darken the background on the right side with black and the jacket down to the bottom limit of the portrait.Before going to the next step, I modified the left eye a little bit, and darkened the eye-sockets.
Close-up of the previous step to see more details, we are almost done.The noze has to be better defined, the area between the eyebrows too. Lets reajust some values first…
Here is the final step after a lot of small touches around the eyes,the forehead, the bridge of the noze. The up lip was darkened. I removed some grey hair from the beard, added some blue highlights in the background and their reflection on the skin to fade the right face’s edge in it. This bring some depth to the artwork. I sprayed the portrait in several slight layers.Just e-mail me if you want to know more about a specific step, or about my pastels..Depending upon you requests, I will put some more lessons. If you are interested in video lessons, just let me know. There are on the way.A last thing, I apologize for my average english.Thank you.

You can learn about Gerard by visiting his website at the Address Below:

https://www.pastel-portraits.com/index.htm

Filed Under: Drawing, Pastels

Comments

  1. IanPilkington says

    May 30, 2010 at 2:47 pm

    Fantastic.. you have shone me it can be done in pastel.. I love Pastel, its the touch, smell, mess and colours. thankyou for encorageing me to try again… Ian

  2. Noor says

    July 29, 2010 at 5:27 pm

    You are terrific. Thank you sooooooooooooooooo much.

  3. TJ McDowell says

    September 9, 2010 at 8:09 am

    Amazing attention to detail. I seriously don’t think I’d have the patience to do this kind of work!

  4. Aileen McLeod says

    October 3, 2010 at 10:19 pm

    You are so talented. I am a member of the Pastel Society of Australia and you would be classed as a Master Pastelist!

  5. Jose Hall says

    February 5, 2011 at 2:32 am

    Gerard, you are the world’s best portrait artist. -Jose

  6. Pat Dole says

    May 26, 2011 at 11:29 am

    This looks great. I’m a big fan of pastel. And what you have show is great! You are an artist!

  7. Al Fazzone says

    September 5, 2011 at 6:59 pm

    Love your style, you are definitely a master.

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