stlukesguild
Well-known member
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Yes... I think that most artists... since the demise of the apprenticeship system... have needed to develop their own technique to painting or art-making. When I moved toward pastels, I began immediately with toned paper thanks to a fellow teacher who had been working at a paper mill during the summer and gave me a dozen huge rolls of heavy brown paper. Initially, I worked directly on the paper. While working on one of these early paintings, I found I wanted to make a huge change. With oil paint I would have just painted it out. I started to erase... but it was taking forever... so I picked up a couple of bottles (small) of crafter's acrylic... which is very matte... in a color almost the same as the paper. This worked incredibly well. I also found that the paint had a better tooth than the paper so I started priming everything with an underpainting of this acrylic. With time, I switched to an underpainting that was more reddish in hue because I liked having little areas of red show through in the tessellations. With time, I used this under everything except the fleshtones (which ended up looking too pink). I started using areas of flat acrylic with time, realizing that the matte acrylic harmonized well with the pastels... and often I would sand the acrylics revealing underlying colors and creating a surface that looked like weathered fresco... which agin went well with the pastels... at least in the way I was using them. The final big innovation for me was adding gold (metallic) leaf. One of my studio partners pointed out that the flattened space and the patterns in my paintings made them look like gigantic illuminated manuscripts. "All that wass needed" he joked, "was gold leaf". I thought the idea was crazy... but ended up trying it out and found it worked well. It makes me feel that one of the reasons techniques are seldom taught in art schools is because so many artists/teachers have developed their own working methods that don't follow the traditional manner of applying paint.