Theatrical Scene Painting: A Lesson Guide / Edition 3

Theatrical Scene Painting: A Lesson Guide / Edition 3

by William Pinnell
ISBN-10:
0809327651
ISBN-13:
9780809327652
Pub. Date:
02/27/2008
Publisher:
Southern Illinois University Press
ISBN-10:
0809327651
ISBN-13:
9780809327652
Pub. Date:
02/27/2008
Publisher:
Southern Illinois University Press
Theatrical Scene Painting: A Lesson Guide / Edition 3

Theatrical Scene Painting: A Lesson Guide / Edition 3

by William Pinnell
$40.0
Current price is , Original price is $40.0. You
$40.00 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores
$23.59 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Please check back later for updated availability.

    • Condition: Good
    Note: Access code and/or supplemental material are not guaranteed to be included with used textbook.

Overview

Theatrical Scene Painting: A Lesson Guide, second edition, is a practical guide to scene painting for students and novices, as well as a reference for intermediate scene painters who wish to refresh or supplement their basic skills. Drawing on his extensive teaching and scene-painting experience, William H. Pinnell clarifies and expands on the lessons of the first edition, providing a detailed overview of the fundamentals of traditional scene painting.

The guide not only covers the basic tools of the trade and various methods of creating texture on scenery but also includes more advanced techniques for scene making, beginning with stonework, woodwork, and wallpaper before moving on to the more intricate techniques of moldings, paneling, drapery, foliage, shiny metal, perspective illusions, scale transfers, scenic drops, and scrims. Pinnell also includes refinements and embellishments that can lead to the development of personal style without sacrificing the goal of realism and more advanced work. Alternative methods to achieve different effects are also featured.

Theatrical Scene Painting: A Lesson Guide was the first book of its kind to provide clear step-by-step instructions in how to paint a wide variety of basic and advanced effects commonly needed for the theater. This new edition clarifies the origins of painting techniques and is supplemented with clearer step-by-step descriptions, new instructional photographs, and drawings that illustrate each major step. This edition also includes additional painting projects and their possible variations, a gallery of nineteen examples of professional scenic works, and an expanded glossary to eliminate confusion in terms.

Useful to both self-taught artists and students, each lesson in the guide can be a stand-alone topic or can form the foundation for a student to build skills for increasingly complex techniques.

The second edition of Theatrical Scene Painting provides many new essential scene painting projects in a clearer format, broadens the scope of the painting examples, and includes updated methods as well as new lessons. This clear and easily accessible guide gives students the ability to put together recognizable illusions.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780809327652
Publisher: Southern Illinois University Press
Publication date: 02/27/2008
Edition description: 2nd Edition
Pages: 276
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.65(d)
Lexile: 1270L (what's this?)

About the Author

William H. Pinnell is a professor at the School of Dramatic Art at the University of Windsor in Ontario, where he has taught for more than twenty years. A member of the Associated Designers of Canada, he has designed and painted for more than one hundred major theatrical productions in Canada and the United States. He is the author of Perspective Rendering for the Theatre, published by SIU Press in 1996.In 2005, he received the Education Achievement Award from the Canadian Institute for Theatre Technology.

Table of Contents

Preface to the Second Edition     vii
Preface to the First Edition     ix
Acknowledgments     xi
Materials and Techniques of Texture     1
Space     3
Paint frame
Boomerang
Continental system
Floor paper
Equipment     7
Buckets and containers
Paint carriers
Brushes
Paint and dye: dry pigments, casein, vinyl paints, latex paints, dyes, bronze powders
Color     19
Color psychology
Basic color mixing
Color wheel
Primaries, secondaries, and complementaries
Using black and white
Table of Nine Mixtures
Classic scene-painting palette (traditional terminology)
Mixing the Base, Tint, and Shade     29
Procedure
Analogous colors and the common denominator
Preparing the Surface to Be Painted     32
Flameproofing
Primer coat
Basic Scene Painting and Texture     34
Focus and toning
Procedural methods
Graded wet blend
Scumbling
Spattering (and spatter and drag)
Sponging
Stippling
Rag rolling
Rolling
Flogging
Puddling
Dry brushing
Stenciling and stamping
Spraying
Brush care
Basic Lessons     71
The Three-Dimensional Illusion and the Light Source     71
Highlights and lowlights
Shadows, glazes/washes
Lining
Using the straightedge
Stonework     80
Bricks
Rough stones
Cut stones
Marble
Wallpaper     103
Painting considerations
Pounce method
Stenciling
Pattern arrangements
Spattering or spraying
Stamping a pattern
Woodwork     116
Graining
Rendering methods: wash method, opaque method, drybrush method
Wainscoting
Recessed and protruding panels
Additional examples
Advanced Lessons     139
Cornice Moldings     139
Roman ogee and cove
Reversing the light source
Panels and Posts     157
Reflective Metallic Objects     161
Graphic-arts approach
Scene-painting approach
Draperies     170
Foliage     180
Clouds, Mountains, and Water     191
Scale Transfers     202
Painter's elevation
Gridding
Opaque and overhead projectors
Perspective and the Vista     209
Perspective
Vanishing points
Drops and Scrims     222
Laying out
Starch priming
Storing drops
Flexible glue
Painting the drop
Translucencies
Cut drops and scrims
A Final Word     232
Glossary     235
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews