05/28/2026
Those beautiful ridges and layers you sometimes see in a painting are created with a palette knife, not a brush.
A palette knife allows the artist to apply paint in a thicker, more expressive way. Instead of soft brush strokes, the paint is spread, layered, scraped and shaped directly onto the canvas. The result is texture you can almost feel with your eyes.
I always find that paintings created with a palette knife technique carry a certain energy. Light touches the raised paint differently throughout the day. The texture creates movement, depth and emotion within the work.
In a piece like Graceful Silhouettes, the artist uses a dynamic palette knife technique, giving the scene both movement and depth.
Learning about an artist’s process changes the relationship we have with the work itself. You begin seeing the patience behind the layers, the pauses in movement and the decisions left visible on the canvas. The work starts to feel less distant and more personal.
The next time you stand in front of a piece of original artwork, move a little closer. Spend a moment with the texture. You may notice something entirely new.