Neal steps in close and takes the brush gently, not out of Malcolm’s hand, just guiding him back over to his palette. He wipes a substantial amount of paint back into the little board. “You don’t need nearly that much at once. Less is more.”
Neal shifts behind Malcolm so they’re body-to-body, guiding the clean brush in Malcolm’s hand back to the canvas to collect more of the paint there and swipe a bit onto the palette, before taking what’s left back to the curve of the bowl. “Don’t pull more paint from your board for now,” he murmurs. “See if you can thin out what you have on the canvas already.”
Malcolm stills for a moment, because is this actually an art lesson or something else…? But then Neal talks about thinning out the paint on his canvas and he looks at it, then looks at Neal over his shoulder.
Neal walks him through it, guiding Malcolm’s hands, fixed on the process and ignoring how good it feels to be close to someone. Pretending to ignore it. Filing the thought away for later. He keeps up a soft commentary the whole time.
Neal's help stops the active dripping, and in a bid to distract from the too comfortable warmth at his back, he notes "it's still a mess, though, right?"
There are streaks from dripping paint all over the canvas.
“I mean… it looks… right. Like. …Real, I guess. Not like the table. Something is wrong with the perspective or… the proportions or something,” he observes. “It doesn’t look right.”
"Six of one, half a dozen of the other," Neal says, tone still even and calm. Painting relaxes him. It always has. "The proportions are what help establish the perspective."
He nudges the brush along, helping flesh one side of the table out with a little of the extra paint built up there.
He grins, again not answering the question. “What do you know about perspective in art? About how we visually construct space and distance?”
Malcolm smells nice, Neal thinks absently. Whatever soap he uses, whatever aftershave it is or the Admiral recreates for him, it’s nice. Earthy. Sharp underneath. It suits him.
“Um. I know geometry… oh, that is better,” he notes of Neal’s change to the shape of the table. “I remember an exercise in art class at school where we had to draw the horizon and then choose a point on the horizon and draw two lines coming from that point towards the near edge of the page at… particular… angles…..”
Neal expounds on the visual theories behind that particular exercise. Viewpoints, horizons, vanishing lines, the illusion of scale. The idea of linear perspective in Western art and shifting perspective and metaphysical use of depicted space in Eastern traditions. He’s tangented off down a track about the idea of “host” and “guest” image focus in Chinese painting when he realizes… they’ve run out of image to paint.
“Nicely done.” He gently lets go and takes a step back, resisting the urge to keep his hands at Malcolm’s waist. “I was barely doing anything by the end.”
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Neal shifts behind Malcolm so they’re body-to-body, guiding the clean brush in Malcolm’s hand back to the canvas to collect more of the paint there and swipe a bit onto the palette, before taking what’s left back to the curve of the bowl. “Don’t pull more paint from your board for now,” he murmurs. “See if you can thin out what you have on the canvas already.”
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“But it’s drying.”
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Neal walks him through it, guiding Malcolm’s hands, fixed on the process and ignoring how good it feels to be close to someone. Pretending to ignore it. Filing the thought away for later. He keeps up a soft commentary the whole time.
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There are streaks from dripping paint all over the canvas.
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“What’s your favorite part of it?” he counters.
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He stares at it a second.
"That... bit of shadow right there," he says. He shifts his weight just faintly. "The table looks wonky though."
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He draws Malcolm's hand over to re-wet the brush before working on smoothing another bit of runny paint into invisibility.
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He nudges the brush along, helping flesh one side of the table out with a little of the extra paint built up there.
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Malcolm smells nice, Neal thinks absently. Whatever soap he uses, whatever aftershave it is or the Admiral recreates for him, it’s nice. Earthy. Sharp underneath. It suits him.
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“Nicely done.” He gently lets go and takes a step back, resisting the urge to keep his hands at Malcolm’s waist. “I was barely doing anything by the end.”
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“Are you sure?”
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Teasing aside, his smile is genuine. He's calmed down. Art does that. "Do you want to keep learning?"
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“You don’t think it’s a lost cause?”
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He's sure he doesn't have one of those like Neal does.
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“What’s something you love?”
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