Donna Dewberry

Donna S. Dewberry (born November 6, 1953) is an American Mormon artist and author. She claims to have developed a "One Stroke" painting technique that will enable anyone to reproduce any effect of nature with one easy-to-learn technique.

Personal

Dewberry is a member of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.[1]

Television

She has a public television show, One Stroke Painting with Donna Dewberry. In 2007, One Stroke Painting was replaced with The Donna Dewberry Show.

One Stroke Technique

The "One Stroke Technique" is a double loading technique that consists of loading a brush with two separate colors. Dewberry claims that with her technique you are able to achieve the shading and highlighting in one stroke .

As a side note, from the Archival records and articles in the UK, it is known that the Schools of Art of the time (1700's) took apprentices and trained them, in either the 'one-stroke' style required for decorating furniture, or the 'one-stroke' style required for decorating pottery. (Those not able to afford the School of Art costs, spent years learning from the Master Painter within a firm). The brushes (paint brushes are called pencils in the Pottery trade) were 'double' and 'triple' loaded, to produce the highlight, body colour and shadow, of the petal, leaf or element, painted wet-on-wet and with a single stroke of the brush. This quick method of painting was used for commercial reasons - to speedily decorate the furniture, pottery and trays ready for sale. So, although the brush carried one, two, three or more colours, it would have taken only 'one stroke' of the brush to produce the more complicated shading, giving depth and beauty to the design. It would have taken much longer to blend these colours together had they been added separately.[2]

A more modern example of the double loading technique is from The Joy of Painting featuring Bob Ross. Bob Ross would double load his brush during the show to make the wet on wet technique easier and to make the painting look more natural.[3]

As it were, it can be assumed that Donna Dewberry did not invent this style.

Writing

She is a columnist for magazines including Tole World, Painting magazine and Decorative Artists Workbook.

Books

References

  1. Famous Mormon Artists
  2. Traditional Tole Painting
  3. "So… Uh… Donna Dewberry…". Vote Goat. Retrieved 13 January 2016.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, May 06, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.