A much more productive time in week 9 of Contemporary Painting Studio thanks to thinking about what I wanted to concentrate on in the last couple of sessions and some prep work during the week. I was particularly pleased with the 2 Journal Quilts I produced (above)
My prep work included taking a high res photo of the finished A3 painting that I was reasonably happy with and printing it out on my A4 inkjet printer using 'poster' settings at 3x3 and 2x2 sizes in order to have the scaled up marks to work from
The 3 x 3 pinned up on the screen was very helpful for working on my large scale newspaper collage . I used burnt umber /ultramarine glazes to make greys , it's still a bit heavy - one of the problems with working on a textured surface and I need to pay attention to the edges of shapes.
The section of old quilt I'd primed with gesso was even more textured so I worked with it, simplifying the shapes from the 2 x2 print. Again a limited palette of Paynes grey, raw sienna , burnt umber and ultramarine with some white reintroduced in areas.
The first item on my 'to-do' list was to prime the quilted collages I'd prepared during the week with diluted acrylic medium so that my paint glazes wouldn't bleed/sink into the fabric.
I'd printed out photos of 2 collages onto Jacquard Inkjet Cotton sheets ( 2 x 1 poster setting stitched together) attached to linen tablecloth with bondaweb then quilted with horizontal wavy lines.
It took a couple of hours to dry ( I'd do it before class another time!)
For painting I used Winsor and Newton transparent acrylic paints in Raw Sienna, Burnt Umber and Ultramarine mixed with gloss medium/Golden soft gel and diluted with water and applied with dry brush . I loved how the brushmarks were retained.
I had a question from one of the other artists in the class who paints with oils why I was using my own W& N acrylic paints rather than the acrylics supplied . Apart from being better quality , highly pigmented and truly transparent ( which is the effect I wanted to achieve) , the main reason is having a lot of experience painting with W&N watercolours, I'm used to the colours and colour mixing . Every paint brand has it's own characteristics - I also use Liquitex heavy body for impasto and Golden fluid for textiles.
Jasper John Catenary (Jacob's Ladder)
Earlier in the week I'd finally made it to the Jasper Johns exhibition at the RA. I was pleased to see more of his joint project with Samuel Beckett which had been one of the highlights of the
print exhibition at the British Museum and like
Olga, appreciated his more recent, personal work over the targets and numbers ( while noting the use of collage....)
I was particularly struck by the particular curves of his 'Catenary' series and started seeing them everywhere and realising that a lot of work I admire contains similar shapes.
I realised that there's a similar curve in this painting and that one of the reasons the largest collaged painting isn't working yet is because the curve is wrong. So I knew what I had to do in my final painting session .