Harbourview Montessori School Project September 2019
THE PAINT ROLLER AS DIRECT TRANSFER TOOL
THE PAINT ROLLER AS OFFSET TRANSFER TOOL
Indexical-mark matrices from all around
used as applied offset transfers
to activate large areas of surface quickly and interestingly.
The roller as a drawing / painting tool with its own learning curve.
INITIALS AS MONOGRAM OR LOGO FORMS
Everyone needs a logo. Your initials supply the raw material.
Albrecht Durer monograms
Wiener Werkstätte monograms
MONOTYPE
Monotype offers a short cut to achieving a good, naturalistic form for a painting while bypassing the difficult skills of drawing.
A photo is taped under a sheet of plexiglas.
The photo serves as a drawing guide.
It works best when the painting is loose and uses a lot of paint.
This is a short cut but not a cheat; as the model underneath gets covered up, you have to go to standard painting practice. At this point you're dealing with the painting itself, not the model.
The painting is transferred to a support under pressure.
The fun of monotype is that your control over the result extends only to the application and to the pressure of the transfer. The fluid dynamics of the materials takes over during the transfer. You never know what image you'll actually get. It's always a surprise.
The term 'monotype' refers to the single image one can pull from the matrix, because most of the paint is transferred. But a second, lighter image can be made if you use light, absorbent paper.
Monotype has a look of its own. It tends toward a lively, unfussy, expressionist look. But the firmness of a photo-based drawing makes itself felt.
The process is marked by its distinctive textures-- like these hydroid patches.
Evanescent lines, like ghosts of brushstrokes, which are impossible to achieve directly, but are a natural part of the process.
It's a collaboration with nature, who paints very well, and in turn makes you a better painter.
That's why one monotype leads to another. The picture needn't end with the initial result. It can serve as the base for a more detailed rendering. The picture can be reworked endlessly.
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