On Friday (17/1/14) ‘drawing, distort and warp’ really helped me to
understand the process of print making, because the task was to develop an
awareness of colour and composition by observing with no tonal drawing. I
brought my seashell for still life drawing, because it related to data, the way
a seashell grows in a spiral. I drew it from different perspectives.
Then I used gouache paint to fill
in the drawing. If I looked at my drawing from a printer point of view, black
and white, I would be able to see where the colours transferred onto the
fabric. I have been trying to do this.
Although at first it seems that I
am still using paint to draw lines, as I go on, it becomes clearer where the
negatives and where the positives are, the balance between black and white.
Then I used photocopying to help create collages.
I used this new process to help
me to look back on my drawings that I have done for my motif designs, then I
used sharpies to fill in any areas where colour would be. It is a bit like
colouring, because I used a pencil as a guide line, then used a fine-liner to
draw continuous line drawing on top. Overlapping these two I get the positive,
then I use a sharpie to fill in any areas that I want to be negative. I think,
in print, you have to be able to see where the balance is. On my first attempt
there was too much positive and not enough negative. Also, I need to think
ahead, to be able to transfer positive and negative space the other way round,
because I think in print, everything is backward.
I had another go at the flat colours (the bottom image
above), but I was having difficulty in getting the flat colours, using flat
colours is a bit like pop art, no blending. I thought of using the photocopier
to photocopy my painting then using a pen knife to cut out the flat colour bits
and representing these in a collage way. I thought this would be another way of
working around it, in a way that I am most comfortable with.
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