Wet-on-wet, or alla prima (Italian, meaning at first attempt), direct painting or au premier coup, "Techniques for Creating a Painting" . ThoughtCo. Retrieved 29 October 2020. is a painting technique in which layers of wet paint are applied to previously administered layers of wet paint. Used mostly in oil painting, the technique requires a fast way of working, because the work has to be finished before the first layers have dried.
In the medium of watercolors, wet-on-wet painting requires a certain finesse in embracing unpredictability. Highly translucent and prone to accidents, watercolor paint will bloom in unpredictable ways that, depending on the artist's frame of mind, can be a boon or a burden. "Art 101: Primer in Wet Media" Medium.com.
Since the mid-19th century, the use of commercially produced paints in small collapsible tubes has facilitated an easily accessible variety of colors to be used for rapid and on-the-spot painting. Impressionists such as Claude Monet, post-Impressionists such as Vincent van Gogh, realists such as John Singer Sargent and Robert Henri and George Bellows, Expressionism such as Chaïm Soutine and Yitzhak Frenkel, and the Abstract Expressionist Willem de Kooning have in different ways employed this technique, and it is still heavily used by both figurative and non-figurative fine artists. Artist Bob Ross employed the technique for his show The Joy of Painting in order to produce complete pieces in real-time within a single episode, after learning the technique from his mentor William "Bill" Alexander.
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