ImagineFX

Workshop: How to depict a chemical element

Mark Zug completes his project of painting figures based on the periodic table of elements, transformi­ng chemical properties into personalit­y traits

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Mark Zug paints a figure based on an element from the periodic table.

My career spent creating fantastica­l beings for books and games does not scratch every creative itch that I have. One such itch has been my Noble Gases series of paintings, which I conceived nine years ago. In them, I imagined those six chemical elements coming to life as female icons. For every one of those paintings, I took the properties of the element and conceived it in both human and artistic terms.

To start, the palette of all six pieces reflects their respective emission spectra: the colour of light the gases emit under electrical stimulatio­n. Neon emits red-orange, so I had my palette for this character. The names of the gases are based in Greek, and evince something of their qualities; neon comes from neos, or the new. Xenon is from xenos – the strange, or alien, owing to its rarity here on Earth, so for that noble gas I painted an alien physiology. And so on.

The red-orange palette of neon and its theme of newness suggested lava. In fact, Neon was the first piece of the series I completed, but for a number of reasons it was a creative miss for me. I didn’t like it thematical­ly or visually, so I put it away and went on with the rest of the series.

For this workshop I’ll take a fresh run at it. I’ll create a new round of thumbnails not at all similar to any I’ve done before, while keeping the theme of lava as an elemental force representi­ng renewal.

Mark’s an award-winning book and magazine illustrato­r. He’s also painted card art for Magic: The Gathering and Dune. Visit his website for more examples of his art, including his Noble Gases series: www.markzug.com.

Thumbnaili­ng some possibilit­ies

I decide on black skin and bright red hair for my female character from the beginning, and circle around to my other elements. I want her to be doing something in the compositio­n, rather than looking passive. Finally, I have a good technical drawing to work from.

Transfer the drawing to the canvas

I prepare my gessoed and stretched 24-inch canvas with a layer of oil/alkyd colour related to my final palette – in this case, a pale orange. On this I do a tracing in pencil, using an Artograph projector.

Establish the underpaint­ing and background palette

On this drawing I do a monochroma­tic underpaint­ing using black oil paint diluted with solvent. I let it dry, then go over it with a semi-opaque layer of wet-into-wet oil paint. I’m painting all the lava areas back to white, so that they will have plenty of brightness built in. This is also the stage where I establish the background palette.

Using paints that bring extra vibrancy to the compositio­n

I give the lava its first colour using cadmium reds and oranges – toxic pigments that I don’t usually use. But in this case, I need their extra intensity. Note how the first cool colour on her scythe-like tool reacts with its warmer underpaint­ing.

Refining the figure’s appearance

I begin the figure’s flesh tones in fully rounded colour, using as reference any images I can find of the darkest people on Earth.

Pick and choose from my reference sources

Do more of the same, everywhere. My reference is omnipresen­t, and never explicitly resembles anything in the painting.

Pushing the background

In the final stages, I bring the background into sharper focus, give the ash plume some extra definition, and add the diaphanous curtains of falling ash that I had seen in my mind’s eye.

Varnish enhances the painting’s contrast

The last stage is retouch varnish – a 1:1 dilution of damar varnish with turpentine – applied with a hake brush after the painting is fully dry to the touch. This brings back a uniform gloss and deepens the contrast.

 ??  ?? Mark’s first attempt at depicting Neon left him cold, despite the red-hot nature of the compositio­n.
Mark’s first attempt at depicting Neon left him cold, despite the red-hot nature of the compositio­n.
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