Showing posts with label burlap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label burlap. Show all posts

Sunday, February 12, 2012

Lincoln, Part II

I've spent the last couple weeks working on my first Lincoln picture. I opted for a light background with a dark Lincoln in the foreground. I'll reverse this with my next Lincoln picture.

One more time. ~72" x ~44" (smaller dimensions shown). Mixed media. Feb 2012. Digital adjustment: increased exposure due to poor lighting at time of snapshot.

I had other plans for the Lincoln stencil but after application of the paint, I think I'm happier with this. I may change it later and I'll post an update if I do. Below is a detail to give a better idea of the texture of the painting itself, which, I think, is difficult to see in the image above.

Detail of One more time. Detail is of area between Lincoln's eyes (Lincoln's left eye visible).

Monday, February 6, 2012

Mixed Media

Having spent time tediously, but rewardingly, working on my Lincoln and other projects, I decided to take some time to work out a non-stencil-based painting. The result is what follows.

into. 34" x 34". Mixed media.

The mixed media include spray, acrylic and household acrylic latex paints. Going into this painting I've been listening to The Antlers albums Burst Apart and Hospice. When I connect deeply with something I try to take notice. I sometimes wonder if it's my obsessive side showing and that time will render my current crushing interest passe, or is there something about hearing or seeing something right now, where I'm at that's important. It might not stay with me forever, but right now it connects. Either way, the honesty and vulnerability (in a good way) of the lyrics are refreshing and powerfully communicate loss, frustration, fear, and knowing yourself but making certain choices anyway. I think I'm at a point where I no longer see these things as good or bad but as experience. As I gain experience I feel richer, more grounded, more alive, more sad, more awake, more excited to be happy, to be hurt, to be flexible, to be mature, to have fun, to set high expectations, to fail in trying, to succeed exceptionally, to build a body of experience new, deep, and diverse.

Monday, December 26, 2011

On Burlap 3, Part 6

Work continues slowly. After cutting the stencil for the fan of feathers and placing it on the background, I found the Contact paper stencil was not adhering well to the acrylic (much of it had residual paper stuck to it). I left the picture alone for about 6 weeks while I tried to resolve the issue. Last week I was in a bookstore and came across Stencil 101 by Ed Roth. I was not interested in the included stencil. I was interested in a section describing the production of your own stencils. This hit me like a lightning bolt and I wondered, "Why has no one told me about this method before!?!" I read about Mylar sheets, stencil burners, pouncer brushes and spray-on, re-positionable adhesive! My answer was found. On the same trip I picked up all the supplies listed for future projects (Lincoln's head is on its way...), including the spray-on adhesive for use in this project. I carefully removed my stencil from the background, sprayed it with the adhesive, let it dry for sixty seconds (minimum) and replaced it on the background before applying the white spray paint. There were issues of the stencil not sticking in some places and the stencil curling in high-detail areas after the application of spray paint. This provided a nice amount of tolerable and interesting variation between feathers of the fan. After three coats of white paint I removed the stencil and the picture below is the result.

Have To (working title). 4'x7'.  Mixed media (acrylic, spray paint).

The next part will include the application of color, design and prints to the individual feathers. The final piece will be the character displaying the fan of feathers.