Archive for December, 2005



Large Junction Sculpture Assembled

Published on December 5, 2005

The disc sander really came in handy on this one getting the mitered pipes relatively true. There was still a good deal of fussy adjustment, and it’s not perfect, but with a little caulk to fill the gaps, only I know how imperfect. Excited to get this sanded and, I think, painted. I want to put some steel straps with rivets around the ends, too.

Large Junction Sculpture Assembled

In the background of this photo is the top bag of my secondhand dust collector. I got this far on Sunday but didn’t get around to posting it.

Large Junction Sculpture Assembled 2


Gouache/Watercolor/RAF/Flag Experiments

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The first image is a watercolor I did on Sunday evening, another study for the military storage facility sculpture/large watercolor I’m planning. I include it here mainly as contrast to the first gouache I did tonight. The areas which are intended to be fairly solid, flat colors are not.

RAF Watercolor 4

The first gouache I tried was scary flat. I was pretty unhappy with it when I first began, but discovered that unlike most watercolor, you can blend gouache even when it’s dry. And you can use watercolor as tint for it. But, the gouache is really opaque, so you have to think about what you’re blending in. White gouache can overpower dark watercolor, for example, and create a grey where you intended shadow. Just a little different way of looking at things. Another pass at the RAF (more camoflaged and bullet-ridden; I was just goofing around).

Gouache Test 1 RAF

After blending practice on the above, I thought I’d try something with more tones, like a flag. The rendering is a little cruder than I’d like, and the photo doesn’t do it justice (excuses, excuses), but I feel like I made some progress. It’s difficult to mix the gouache - the colors are just so much stronger than watercolor, and they dont’ get very transparent.

Gouache 2 Flag Waving

It’s really worth a try, I think. The flat colors obviously appeal to me, but the shading possibilities seem more like acrylic to me, and the opacity is really unbelievable. Stay tuned as Dave teaches himself to paint.


Rivers and Tides

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Last night I watched the Andy Goldsworthy documentary, it was very interesting. I liked watching him work in the different enviroments. Listening to him talk about his ideas; his successes and failures, textures, colors and time gave a deeper understanding of what he was doing with his work. Without these ideas what is the point of it all anyway? Are we simply creating images?


A Painting a Day

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This is something I’ve considered doing before, but this guy is doing oil paintings and well … he’s actually doing it. Selling the paintings for ~$100, too. That should be enough to support you, right?


Gouache?

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Have you ever used gouache before? I’ve heard about it in museums before, and read “ink and gouache, 1913″ a bazillion times, but I never had any idea what it was. Finally, curioisity has gotten the better of me, and I’ve been reading up a bit. I have to say, I thought it was kind of like a crayon or oil pastel, but apparently it’s opaque paint, like watercolor, but totally flat. I think I’m going to have to get some at lunch today and try it out. Apparently there is gold and silver gouache as well.


Register Article

Published on December 4, 2005

To check out the latest press go DesMoinesRegister.com and select news. Then scroll down to “people and places” and you should find the article, “Will work for food”.