The Cocktail Party
The Cocktail Party
11"x14"
Watercolor
Initially I was going to call this The Pig and Hare, but when I saw the wine glass I changed it and thought they looked like they were at a cocktail party. The rabbit with the pipe and the pig with the wine glass.
When I was looking for inspiration I saw these guys from one of my favorite artists/photographers, Steve Lyddon on PMP. They looked like they had a rusty crust on them that comes from outdoor exposure. I remembered in an obscure watercolor book I had gotten years ago that it showed how to do stone or rust work. So for this week's experiment you use a combination of household items. The process is wet the paper (matboard in this instance), add watercolor, dab in olive oil to act as the resist, sprinkle salt and flour where you want it. Then if necessary you repeat the whole process until you get the coloration you desire. I love how the texture comes out and yes the flour does give it a mottled raised surface. Don't they look like English academics trying to make the best of a stuffy cocktail party? (Please I hope I didn't offend anyone - no criticism intended, just my story folks)
Hope they give you a smile.
11"x14"
Watercolor
Initially I was going to call this The Pig and Hare, but when I saw the wine glass I changed it and thought they looked like they were at a cocktail party. The rabbit with the pipe and the pig with the wine glass.
When I was looking for inspiration I saw these guys from one of my favorite artists/photographers, Steve Lyddon on PMP. They looked like they had a rusty crust on them that comes from outdoor exposure. I remembered in an obscure watercolor book I had gotten years ago that it showed how to do stone or rust work. So for this week's experiment you use a combination of household items. The process is wet the paper (matboard in this instance), add watercolor, dab in olive oil to act as the resist, sprinkle salt and flour where you want it. Then if necessary you repeat the whole process until you get the coloration you desire. I love how the texture comes out and yes the flour does give it a mottled raised surface. Don't they look like English academics trying to make the best of a stuffy cocktail party? (Please I hope I didn't offend anyone - no criticism intended, just my story folks)
Hope they give you a smile.
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