Wednesday, June 02, 2010

14th



Maze II

Still just having fun, and still acrylic, medical test strips, and blood. Must do something about the camera situation here. This is terribly out of focus and colors are off. It's much more red-bluish in real life and less orange-y.

So all of these have been following more or less the same process—each panel is gesso'ed and gets several coats of paint (whatever leftover colors I have). After I attach the test strips, I either sand the test strips lightly or I take an X-acto knife and I peel off the black plastic off the surface. This reveals the paths that lead from the blood droplet to the little machine that reads the glucose (the faint white lines). Then I coat the whole surface with gel medium.

At this point, the panel is black & white (the colors of these particular test strips) and whatever colors the panel already had. Once the gel medium dries, I paint the whole thing with a diluted color. Because this paint is thinned quite a bit, the original panel colors come through this layer. Then I pull some of the colors off the test strips by laying down a wet rag and rolling the rolling pin over it. So I basically pull a relief print onto the rag:



Then I figure out what colors I want the open spaces to be, and start working on that.

I probably have another 2 or 3 panels worth of the black & white strips before I start on the black, white, and blue strips! I'm thinking that I should make a really big maze!

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

I think the rag looks might interesting! You could just frame that.

Shumei

fingerstothebone said...

OK, the next print I pull, I'll send you the rag. You can frame it up!

margaret said...

Definitely a harder maze this time. I love seeing glimpses of your physical process, thanks for the detail and pic/s. As to camera, I've had great luck with my Sony Cyber-shot. My buddy Scott (I think you met him) has one of the latest models and loves it.