Step one on the collage round robin

April 23rd, 2006

Last week we bought the 140lb Arches watercolour paper, 22″ x 30″. We also bought a few acrylic brushes and a cool bamboo wrap for them, the the brushes will be coming to my art class on Wednesday with me :)

This week there were loads of posts about soaking and stretching the paper Vs. gessoing both sides. I finally got my hands on an issue of CPS yesterday and managed to read through THE article today. It says to gesso both sides of the watercolour paper, and I think it is only necessary to soak and stretch the paper if peparing it to receive watercolour paints.

Anyway, we soaked the paper in a oval-shaped bucket (as we don’t have a bath) and then stretched it using gum tape, attached to my standing frame. After the paper was dry and Miles cut it in half for me, today I decided to gesso both sides of the sheet anyway. With paintbrush in hand I still wasn’t sure what I was going to do for the background so I read and re-read the 2 articles in CPS and gathered a dozen or so of my Golden’s heavey bodied acrylics around me. In the end I went for the fluid acrylic in transparent red iron oxide and just went for it! I kept watering down the paint on my pallet and painting on and dabbing it off with a kitchen towel. When I had finished opainting I felt quite elated, like I was on a high or something. I can’t remember feeling quite like that even after finishing other pieces that I have really liked. Perhaps it was about working on a different surface or something. I just felt really liberated! I thought about adding more to it or layering anoother colour, but then realised that I actually liked it just the way it was :) It is difficult to see on the image because it is a lot lighter in colour than the paper is IRL, but it has lots of dept and texture. The texture is uneven, not just because of the paint effect but because I used clear gesso there were bits I missed and bits I went over a couple of times and have more gesso and more/less texture than the rest of the paper.