Posts Tagged ‘painting techniques’

Difficulty choosing colors for your painting? Try clear Contact paper

Saturday, June 6th, 2009

For the better part of the past month, I’ve been working on a painting that I call SuperAcid Autobacs-Ambilify.

I’m very close to finishing this painting, but I’ve been very challenged lately with selecting the right set of colors for the central part of the composition.

In other words, the composition is fine, but there’s a pretty large area in the center of the canvas where I’ve waffled over color combinations.

So I had my friend Oliver Hibert look at the painting last night. I also brought a roll of clear Contact paper, and I covered the canvas with it. This allowed me to paint over the canvas, without fear of paint buildup, as we tested different colors.

Long story short, we decided to “go green.” Oliver had some mint green and a light kelly green laying around, and we gravitated toward that part of the color wheel. See below.

Contact paper is laid over the left half of this canvas, allowing me to test different colors.

Contact paper is laid over the left half of this canvas, allowing me to test different colors.

Before meeting up with Oliver, I was wary of using green, simply because I feel like I use green so frequently in my paintings. But Oliver showed me otherwise.

Oliver and I also had a good talk about how difficult it is to choose colors when you’re employing practically every color in a painting. You’d think that, because you’re using every color, it would be easy to add another.

Actually, just the opposite is true. The more colors you add, the harder it can be to pick the right one. It’s almost like building a house of cards; the more you add, the more you risk. It’s hard to explain. But do you know what I mean?

It’s almost easier to stick with an analogous color scheme. Yet, where’s the fun in that?

Thanks for reading,
Grant

Random art: A new series of paintings inspired by randomness

Sunday, September 21st, 2008

Afterword on October 2, 2008: I’ve since put this project on hold, simply because I have a few other commitments. One of them is implementing a redesign of this site. While I was very excited by the time component of this project at the outset, I quickly realized it just wasn’t realistic. I will return to this project in time.

This weekend I have embarked upon a ridiculous art experiment, in an effort to unlock new approaches to making work and force my mind to try new compositional methods.

The experiment relies on the wisdom of randomness as a foundation for producing a series of 15 paintings, based on the materials I have on hand. My goal is to paint these pieces by the end of the year.

At left, the paint cups before the “beer pong paint lottery.” At right, a ball lands in the cup.

In this experiment, I used randomness 1.) to determine the size of the canvases I will paint and 2.) to select paint color combinations for each painting.

Painting sizes were determined using the Random Integer Generator at random.org. This random number generating tool selected the length of stretcher bars, from 8 to 26 inches.

The process of determining each painting’s color combinations was slightly more complicated and chaotic. It was a lot like beer pong. I got together 70 cups of “leftover” paint (an ounce here, two ounces there) from paintings I’ve already made—it’s a bit like recycling. I arranged these cups onto my painting table, from which I bounced a ping-pong ball. When the ball landed in a cup, that paint would be set aside and put into a group number. In sequential order (Group 1, Group 2, etc.) five paint colors were assigned to each painting.

Once canvas sizes and paint combinations were determined, I held a “draft” to assign paintings with color combination groups. I then held yet another draft to establish the sequence of production.

The experiment has led to some predictably unexpected results:

My first painting is 18 inches high by 19 inches wide, and will include navy, light blue, yellow, fluorescent orange, and fluorescent red-orange.

The seventh painting, as another example, will be 22 inches high by eight inches wide, and will have turquoise, light blue, pine green, light green, and purple as a basis.

The paint groups
The 14 paint groups. The 15th paint group is a “wildcard,” to be used in the fourth painting in this series.

Why I have gone down this path? People who know me well that I’ve long enjoyed adding randomness into the creative process. I see randomness as a way of challenging the mind to try new things. Contestants on TV shows such as Project Runway and Design Star, for example, have no idea what project will be thrown their way next. When you’re invited to create an installation in a gallery or museum, a room’s dimensions is pretty much a set of random variables.

I have found that I am more prolific when I have more parameters around my work, which randomness provides. Dealing with random variables in the creative process is also a way of testing one’s wits. Plus, randomness can be a lot of fun, as it leads to unexpected results.

Random Art Series: The Official Table

Painting # Size Paint Group Projected due date
1 18 in. x 19 in. 8 Sep 25
2 21 in. x 14 in. 3 Sep 30
3 12 in. x 16 in. 2 Oct 7
4 13 in. x 8 in. Wildcard Oct 12
5 20 in. x 11 in. 5 Oct 18
6 17 in. x 20 in. 7 Oct 24
7 22 in. x 8 in. 10 Oct 31
8 21 in. x 25 in. 11 Nov 9
9 19 in. x 8 in. 13 Nov 16
10 17 in. x 26 in. 12 Nov 23
11 22 in. x 19 in. 1 Nov 30
12 23 in. x 11 in. 9 Dec 8
13 25 in. x 8 in. 4 Dec 15
14 18 in. x 21 in. 14 Dec 22
15 9 in. x 26 in. 6 Dec 31

On that note, I am heading back to the easel. Thank you for reading. Check back in the near future to gauge my progress … and keep my honest with my plans.

Wishing you happiness and the causes of happiness,
—Grant