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2024 #30×30 Day 11 : The Loaded Brush (or Knife)

June 12, 2024

10×10″ Oil on Panel

     “What is that saying about stepping in the same river thrice?’

Every painting starts by making piles of color. I just make piles of color till I have everything I need to fill the image. Sometimes I’m looking at a photo and matching colors. Sometimes I’m just choosing combinations I enjoy.

This ‘shrub-mark’ here is a single loaded knife (or brush) stroke. You can see the multi-colored effect, as opposed to a single-color mark like the gold schmeer at the bottom. You can use the brush like a little spatula, scooping up different colors on each side – or – you use a palette knife to place colors onto the brush in a row of blobs. Choosing of course, what order you want the colors to appear.

Sometimes I mix a pile of ‘dirty’ paint from two or three clean mixes. But I don’t whip the colors together very well. The result is an even more randomly multi-colored mark. I’ll often pick up color right off the painting, mix it with some other hue, and put it back down in the same place.

Either way, the goal with loaded marks, is optical blending. Step back from the painting, and it should resolve. Maybe more so, maybe less so, depending on how boldly it’s painted.

This orange is a colored ground showing through.

In this case I painted a bright peach tone with an acrylic/gesso mix. I don’t paint it uniformly, and sometimes I paint big shapes or marks with two or three other colors.

Actually, here’s a shot of what some underpainting looks like.

Some of the very best underpaintings are just an old painting you’re painting over. You get the most random-but-harmonized undertone that way. But I only do that if I’ve deleted a piece immediately. (Before it’s dry).

With my heavily textured work, if the painting is dry, it has to be scraped or sanded down, and that’s messy/difficult/time consuming/toxic. It’s more toxic to breathe paint dust than it is to paint normally with solvent, which I also avoid. It’s not just the mask wearing, it’s the cleaning the room as well. I paint in my living room these days so – I don’t want cadmium dust accumulating in the floorboards or couch cushions.

But – I will scrape a wet painting down immediately after finishing, or halfway through, or sometimes the next day if it’s been bugging me all night. Better to ‘delete’ sooner than later! More energy left to restart. And the sooner you scrape it down, the more of the paint you can reuse :)

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