Working on the painting 'Dissolution of Form' - Part 3

in #dtube5 years ago (edited)


Part 3 - tracing the lines

The projector is a very useful tool to get my 3D-edited references traced on the canvas. Back then I was using a thin brush with acrylics, today I prefer to trace the lines with a this acrylic pen. The tricky part of tracing on a such a large format is that the canvas is not really stable and you have keep adjusting the projection over and over again. Sometimes, of course, it also happens that you move the easel accidentally...

Previous videos:


The finished painting can be seen here: http://gric.at/gallery/bild288.htm


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Hi Peter, that is wonderful detailed and complex work. Using large format canvas makes it easy and the same time complicated you can work on small details better but to do the long lines without need to reload your brush is not really easy. My problem when I use fine brush with acrylic paint is that it gets dry so quickly. I know that people dilute it with water but is there anything else you do for that. Thank you for this video, it is very helpful to learn from such talented and experienced Artist. Cheers...

I use water but you also can try to use acrylic retarders.

I heard about retarders but never tried, may be will test it, otherwise I waste so much paints :)

The same here, 80% of my acrylics just dry on the palette...

Peter, use glass as a palette, then you can strip it off and use the reverse image in a collage, or like I did once, I played with my glass sheet a little more and then just framed it:

DECALCOMANIAC COLORFIELD ABSTRACTION WITHOUT NUMBER 001-1600.jpg

I'm also using glass but I never end up with something useful!

That is a great Idea to use a glass and it looks really nice. I do not know how about you but one of the Russian Impressionist Igor Sakharov uses canvas as palette for his Oil painting and at the end depending on how it looks like also frames them as abstract.

yes, that is a good idea as well, and as a matter of fact, now that you mention it, I've done so myself, using a small panel instead, which later I just added a few things to.

Retarders may not be the best answer - I tried them long time ago (I doubt that they are any better now) but what they do is make the paint gummy, and that isn't workable either.
For some time now there is a product on the market by Golden, which is GOLDEN OPEN, and I tried a giveaway store sample. It works pretty good, alas it is also very expensive!
Just try to be fast. Another product I like to use for fine brush work are GOLDEN FLUID: I just put a few drops out, they go a long way, are very economic. Their pigment is super strong and concentrated, so you can thin them with water quite a bit, which makes them stay open longer too. And no, I am not a spokesperson for Golden, lol

Thank you Otto, I can imagine the quality of paints will be also altered by using retarders, you are right to try to work faster and just plan in advance that is one of the solution of problem, but thank you for sharing the tips about what you used Golden Fluid sound reasonable :)

Those retarders today are different. I'm about to test the Lascaux Retarder.

Let me know how it works - I have not tried one in a long time, maybe they make them better now.

Your post was upvoted by the @art-venture account after manual review and included in Art-Venture magazine. The upvote and support of Art-venture magazine would greatly appreciated!
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@jaguar.force is a troll! Feel free to flag!

When posting content that either is owned by someone else or inspired by someone else’s works, it is proper to list the said source in your post with a link to the original.

Failing to do so is considered plagiarism, and could result in being blacklisted by curation groups or even flagged.

Examples include:

  • Using another artist's original drawing/painting/digital art as a “study” or inspiration without linking the original and giving credit to the original artist.
  • Linking to someone else’s YouTube video with no source.
  • Using someone else’s photos or text without linking to the original source etc.

Please make sure you do so in the future, thank you.

@sources - It is his own original work - you guys are a frigging nuisance - go back under the bridge where you came from! But maybe there isn't room for all the trolls that seem to proliferate on Steemit these days!


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© Otto Rapp aka @thermoplastic - Seatlle 2016-08-07 - Panasonic DMC-TZ36

You are just thoughtlessly following that troll @jaguar.force who is stalking @gric. Before you make any kind of unfounded comments, better do your research and show exactly what you are talking about! Post an example of what he is supposed to have copied!

@thermoplastic, it's a simple bot which gets triggered by commenting with "!sources". The @jaguar.force troll is using/abusing it to annoy and intimidate artists here on Steemit.

ah, I understand - good to know - I will be on the lookout for Jaguar images then! I traced a few of them already being ripped off wallpaper blogs.

When posting content that either is owned by someone else or inspired by someone else’s works, it is proper to list the said source in your post with a link to the original.

Failing to do so is considered plagiarism, and could result in being blacklisted by curation groups or even flagged.

Examples include:

  • Using another artist's original drawing/painting/digital art as a “study” or inspiration without linking the original and giving credit to the original artist.
  • Linking to someone else’s YouTube video with no source.
  • Using someone else’s photos or text without linking to the original source etc.

Please make sure you do so in the future, thank you.

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