I remember an undergraduate drawing class where we were set loose to roam campus and find a building to draw. I picked a large brick historic building.
I’d been working on perspective and I was feeling accomplished. I took my ruler with me and ruled out every single line of bricks in that building and got them all placed using linear perspective. I was pretty proud.
Being proud in a drawing class is often the first step to being humbled. I remember the instructor pointing out, gently, “You know, you don’t actually have to draw every single brick.”
Oops.
If you create work that is representational, that’s a challenge in any medium: how to suggest a texture or material without showing every little detail. How to suggest a tree and its leaves without actually drawing all the leaves. How to suggest textures on a building.
I had some fun this week creating bricks-that-are-not-every brick, using glue resist. It’s a pleasing and straight-forward resist method: paint or print or drizzle washable school glue (Elmer’s. White) on fabric; let it dry, paint over it, let the paint dry; wash off the glue.
Here are some of the textures I created:
I created the pattern by forcing the glue through a screen with about 1/4” x 1/4” openings
I drizzled the glue over ochre-color fabric then over-painted with a brick color. I had high hopes for this one but was mostly disappointed. It was too “hot.” I overpainted with white wash and spattered, but it’s too overworked to use as a big peice. I used it in a small section just as a contrast.
I stamped the glue with a square shape cut from cardboard. I like this one.
This is not a glue resist, but I like the way it looks with the others. This is the ghost image of a hand-cut stencil monotype printed on my gelatin plate.
Here’s a peek of how these patterns are working together in creating my row houses.
Little by little this story is taking shape.
. . . . .
You are invited: STUDIO TOUR. It’s just four weeks away. I would just love it if any readers within driving distance of DeLand made the trek for a visit. There are 18 DeLand-area artists on the tour altogether so it’s well worth the trip. And it’s FREE!
For all the artmakers: Happy creating
For all the art lovers: Happy appreciating
Thank you for reading. I always enjoy questions and comments.
--Bobbi
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