29 August 2025

Rebozo and Marigolds

I ran across a reference photo of this girl, all made up, dressed up, and adorned with a marigold tiara for Dia de los Muertos, and there was something about the look in her eye and the quaint feel of her smooth hair and crowned head that appealed to me. And of course, I'm all about the color, so I traded in parts of her attire for something brighter and more fanciful by giving her this rebozo (a traditional Mexican scarf) to complete her outfit.

This was a challenging one to paint in some ways, in that there needed to be a face under all the paint that was "right" before the superficial decoration could be added. I repainted the eyes and the mouth a few times before I was satisfied, and then went on to the stark but beautiful "mask" she is wearing.

There were also some challenges with the clothing, because the rebozo is patterned, but there were shadows that had to look natural within the pattern.

Over all, though, this came together fairly easily, over a period of several days. I spent most of the third day just tweaking all the patterns and applying second coats of color over the white or the pink, to make sure it popped. I don't usually pursue photo-realism in paintings (particularly portraits), but this one somehow came out more real looking than usual, I think. Of course, I don't know how I did that, so I'm not sure I can duplicate it! Anyway...



This is "Marigolds," acrylics on a 12x12 thin birch board.


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