Today’s watercolor experiment:
Surface preparation:
I used my straight razor today. Not on my face, on my watercolor paper. I used the paper as a strop, dragging it back and forth with the sharp end dragging. There was no chance of cutting the surface if I did it right. I did cut the paper with shallow strokes of my double edged razor.
With the vermilion ink at my disposal, I found some of the razor cuts and quilled them in. I also penned in a surface design in low center with a fine nib.
First painting:
I quickly washed the top half of the paper with Winsor red and the bottom with yellow ochre. I kept the two pigments separate. I squeegeed the excess paint and just left the red and yellow stains.
Next:
After drying, I soaked the paper with Winsor red and got my scrapes in, most of them left-to-right, upward diagonal strokes. Although the red glaze was uniform across the whole surface, the underlying yellow tint at the bottom gave the appearance of a graded wash.
During the drying time I experimented with different pigments. I liked the way the quinacridone purple interacted with the background red. I tried to keep it away from the yellow, to avoid a muddy color. I spattered some cadmium yellow pale as well as clear water on the paper in an attempt to get some interesting blooms.
The most interesting effect:
I don’t use Peacock (phthalo) blue that much, but I tried it today. It seemed to work very well not only in the red area but also in the yellow.
Bass habitat?
I drew the Peacock blue brush along the lines that I etched in with my razor. The blooms that I was hoping for with my spattering of the yellow and the water happened here. As I drew my brush across the indented line, the blue spread out. I regulated the speed to give a triangular, spider webby shape. The first one reminded me of a christmas tree. I did another and another, just like they do at the lake to make a habitat for the bass.
Comment:
I tried a variety of surface modifying techniques, mainly with flat edges and sharp edges. Jules, one of my twitter friends, suggested the idea of painting on sandpaper. Intriguing idea that I will have to try (with brushes I don’t need). I might also try using sandpaper to sand the watercolor paper.
All this is fine, but it is just technique. The question is: What do I want to express with my painting? I could be literal, for example, and roughen up the surface to express my ‘rough day’. I could link a texture with a pigment (i.e., rough equals red). But this is painting, not sculpture… Hmmm… I suppose it could be both, depending on what I want to express.
I haven’t come close to exhausting the limits of the watercolor medium. Perhaps my foray into surface manipulation is just a distraction. I should get back to basics.
Wow, it’s good to come home and find such wonderful posts waiting for me.
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Thank you so much!
J
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Good. Yes. Very. But what is it exactly they do at the lake?
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Bass like hiding places, so they dump old Christmas trees in the lake as places for them to hide.
J
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Your watercolours remind me of work by Helen Frankenthaler. I like the bass habitat.
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Thank you for your kind words!
J
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