Fat Over Lean — What It Really Means

Overview

Indirect painting is one of the most widely used approaches in oil painting. It allows for control over value, color, and surface in ways that cannot be achieved in a single pass.

It is also widely misunderstood.

Many problems in layered painting—cracking, delamination, sinking-in, and uneven surfaces—do not come from a single mistake. They arise from how different layers behave as a system.

This session examines indirect painting from a technical perspective:

  • How a painting is physically constructed from support to varnish
  • How different layers behave as they dry and cure
  • Why layers move differently over time
  • How underpainting, body color, and glazes interact
  • What causes structural failure between layers
  • How historical practice compares to modern materials
  • What practical decisions reduce risk in layered painting

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Course Includes

  • 1 Lesson