Painting Outdoors or In the Studio
My experience with painting happened when I first visited my uncle's graphic arts studio, where I took contact with the tempers and brushes as well as other materials used in that activity. I remember that the jars of tempera came from Germany and Holland. The tempera is a material that is diluted with water, and using a brush is transferred to the paper. It is a painting that covers, contrasting with watercolor that is transparent, or the ink that could be. The oil is a material that covers as well, but offers a different texture and its use is more for paintings over canvases. The use of the tempura was destined for commercial work. Additionally, to my experience with tempera in mostly commercial works, I also got experience with oil painting. Indeed, when I was in high school, I had the opportunity to attend an oil painting course, taught by a professor at the School of Fine Arts in Lima, during the school holidays. In there I learned a lot from the technique of oil painting, an