What is colour and how does it affect your painting?
There is no simple answer. Remove the colour and obviously all that remains is a black, white and grey image. Is that a limited palette? Probably not. You'd have little more than a tonal sketch and unless you were famous and probably dead your painting with have little value. Black and white or sepia might work in photography, but probably not in a painting.
Don't reject the limited palette though. Mixing a greater or lesser amount of just two or three colours
in most or all of your strokes or washes creates harmony. Choose transparent, not opaque colour and you will also avoid mud and produce a refreshing and vibrant work of art.
in most or all of your strokes or washes creates harmony. Choose transparent, not opaque colour and you will also avoid mud and produce a refreshing and vibrant work of art.
Colour creates mood. We all know that warm colours are uplifting and that cool colours are melancholic, but there's much more to producing mood than plastering on a wash of red or blue. For instance, is a predominantly cool painting with a splash of warmth a cool painting? Not necessarily. The final result depends on so many aspects. But what is true is that you are unlikely to achieve your intended effect unless you have planned your colour scheme first.