Tuesday, September 28, 2010

In A Scrape: Challenge

Blogging is so much fun: people sit around and think up ways to engage each other - me. How great is that?

Well Michelle Ward over at GPP Street Team put out a challenge: don't paint your surfaces - scrape them.

So I did. Here is what happened when I did it in the Studio's 1001 Journal And here is what happened when I scraped the inside of a cereal box.
See those cool little polka dots? They come from holding the scraping card at a very low angle while running across the page.
So take the paint onto the card in a thin layer an inch (5cm) or so up from the bottom (not just on the edge)
and lay the card down pretty low to the paper as you scrape across. It makes the paint skip in bubbles and bursts across the page and the bottom edge is not pressed so fully down as to homoginize the line of paint.
Cool, eh?
Examples from other papers.
Michelle has loads of links on her blog to see more scraped paint examples.

How much is too much?

Well, its been days. One thing after another and I haven't matched my camera chip up (from the studio) up with my computer (at home).
Anyway ...
I spent a couple of days putting hand embroidery onto the crayon paper from last week. (See below for earlier posts about it if you are just tuning in.) The peice is kinda big (18 or so inches or maybe about 40cm square-ish) I had an idea about staying with just three different stitches: the herringbone, like in the pale blue checkerboard in the middle; a blanket stitch, as in the big circle on the right and the dark blue Xs below it; and the chain as in the smaller blue circle in the lower left. But I couldn't quite stick to that and used a running stitch (hmm .. not entirely satisfied there)
After I decided that I had put enough embroidery on the piece I got to thinking about the question How much is too much? Or: how does one know when one is done? I had an artist in the studio this summer asking the same question. She was having so much fun that I thought her answer was probably "whenever you want to stop", or "whenever you have to give the piece back to its owner" (there was a schedule for this costume).
But for this piece I thought that I would take it through several layers and media and see if I reached a state of Too Much.
Not yet apparently: I had some painted brown bag that worked beautifully with the colors of embroidery floss so began cutting and gluing them in place:
and here:
Do you want to know how I got the triangles and ovals to exactly match the stitched spaces?(this seemed vaguely brilliant and terribly fussy to me: I laid a piece of white tissue paper on top and traced and labeled each triangle, each little space. When I had cut them out I could put them on the section of painted paper that I wanted(either the dark blue parts or the white dotted parts) and set them in their proper places awaiting some gel medium for gluing. I glued and weighted all of the parts overnight to make sure that the corners stuck. It worked.
Still ready for more visual intrigue, I got out some acrylic paint and had at some surrounding areas:
And here too: (very top and very bottom)
And so, to date, the layers and stages of ornamentation include:
*crayon and other color sticks on brown paper
*acrylic paint wash
*crumpling
*iron on fusible
*paper cut
* tulle
*writing a poem-ish statement about Who Forgets and Who Remembers
*drawing in marker the general over-pattern inspired by Indian sari patchwork
*machine stitching to felt
*hand embroidery
*collage
*paint
Juicy.
We await the next step ...
Stay tuned.