'Marsh After Rain' 16x20 pastel ©Karen Margulis purchase painting with Paypal $225 |
I have several stacks of old paintings still attached to foam core. I just stack them up. I have 7 years of bad paintings. I need to do something about them. I could use all the foam core not to mention the shelf space. I could throw them out. More on that tomorrow. But I hate to waste good paper. So I'll recycle them instead.
stacks of old Bad paintings |
There are many ways to recycle a pastel. You can cut them up choosing the little gems hidden in the mess. You can collage with them. You can cut them up and make greeting cards. But if the bad painting is on good sanded paper I just like to paint over it. I might brush it off or wet it down. But today I decided to spray the whole painting with some workable fixative.
Here is the BEFORE painting.
An older painting probably 6 or 7 years old |
This painting was done probably 6 or 7 years ago. I was in my more detailed phase. Notice all of the leaves on the trees. I also tried to paint every blade of marsh grass. Go ahead and click on it to see all the grass! Over all it is just dull and busy.
It needed to be recycled!
In this photo I have done some work to the sky and tree line. I made the sky brighter and with more energy. I simplified the treeline by lowering them and making two distinct layers of trees. I opened them up with more 'sky holes'.
Finally I went in with some compressed charcoal to emphasize some areas and I added bits of the pink color to move the eye around the painting.
This transformation took about 30 minutes of 'power painting'. I had fun recycling this marsh to be more in line with my new style of Vortex Energy painting. (I just made that up)
Now on to the next one!
2 comments:
I absolutely love this re-cycled painting! beautiful! I also like seeing your stack of oldies. I have been doing my pastel paintings on various papers that I tape to a large masonite board. So then I have a bunch of papers that I tape onto newsprint and they are just layered . Sometimes they move around and get smeared. Glad to hear about the Blair fixative, too. I only used fixative once at the end of a painting and it darkened it so much that it changed the values and looked dead to me!
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