This is a followup of my recent post about taking apart frames, unearthing paintings, and general reorganization of my old art. Thanks to a nudge from a couple of my readers, I decided to take an old painting and give it a makeover. This painting looked like this about a year ago. Kind of nice, and I was trying new things, so it was a true learning piece, but I didn't love it.
I'd heard of "gesso soup" which award winning artist Kathleen Conover uses. Then a recipe for it was published in the WSO Watermark newsletter, so I was handed a new way to have fun with this piece of paper. (Ask me and I'll share the simple recipe.) With a few tools and a batch of "soup" I was good to go.
Here's what it looked like after my application of "soup." I left a couple of areas from the original, but mostly just slathered it on. I also lifted some of the goop with stamps.
I had not been thrilled by my original color choices--too cool and too reminiscent of the Southwest colors.
So part of the makeover was to warm it up with colors inspired by the Columbia River Basin where the petroglyph of tsagaglalal--She Who Watches-- was carved. The new surface took on the watercolor paint in a surprising way and I began to see a wonderful weathered and ancient look to the surface.
2 comments:
Wow! what a transformation! I love what the "Gesso Juice" did... and the warm colors are so cool layered over everything, with just a pentimento of the cool showing through :)
I think Kathleen C. calls it gesso juice. I like the soup name. You did a super job of using it. Way to go!
Linda
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