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by huggingrear
1257 days ago
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>and tracing is absolutely not "VERY common" Paintover does not have to mean actual 'tracing', a LOT of artists use photos as direct references and paint over them in a separate layer, keeping the composition, poses, colors very close to the original while still changing details and style enought to make it transformative enough to be considered a 'new work'. Here are two examples of artist Sam Yang using two still frames from the tv show Squid Game and painting over those, the results which he then sells as prints: https://www.inprnt.com/gallery/samdoesarts/the-alleyway/
https://www.inprnt.com/gallery/samdoesarts/067/ That said, you could even get away with less transformation and still have it be considered original work, take Andy Warhol's 'Orange Marilyn' and 'Portrait of Mao', those are inked and flat color changes over photographs. |
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- Extending the slant roof in the background, it intersects with the left figure at around the height of the nose, but in the painting it intersects with the middle of her neck.
- Similarly the line of the fence on the left is at the height of her hairline, but in the painting it is at the height of the middle of the head, and also more slanted than in the frame.
- On the right side, the white part of the pillar is similarly too low compared to the figure.
- The pole in the background has a lot of things off with regards to size, thickness, or location too.
Essentially, everything is a bit off with regards to location, size and distance. It doesn't really make sense to paint over something and then still do everything differently from the base layer, so it was probably just drawn from reference the normal way -- probably having the picture on another screen and drawing it again from scratch, rather than directly painting over the frame.
I agree with regards to Warhol but that doesn't really establish it as very common amongst painters.