Since
Claybord™ is forgiving, I can draw and rework pencil drawings
right on the surface. After sketching, I used a mixture of Burnt Umber and Mars Black to lay
in the bold dark patterns on the pots. Claybord™ is very
absorbent so your paint will dry quickly. Using subtle washes, I then
concentrated on the shaded areas on the prehistoric Indian ceramics. This
began to develop form in space. Make sure you use a matte medium when
diluting your acrylics with water to preserve the integrity of your paint.
One of the great advantages
of Claybord™ is the layering of color you can achieve. Using
warm earth tones (sepia, burnt umber, raw umber, transparent red iron
oxide and cadmium orange), I established the ground and the background.
To further develop the form of each object I used many layers of very
diluted sepia and raw umber washes, which warm the objects. |
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Both
the Claybord’s surface and rigidity provide me an opportunity to
experiment with different materials, often using mixed media at virtually
any stage of the painting. For example, I wanted the petroglyphs to appear
as they had been pecked into the stone background. I sketched the images
of four quail and a vortex and then brushed art masking fluid onto these
drawings using a small stiff brush in a pointillist style (small dots)
allowing some of the under painting to show through. I then painted over
the dry masking fluid with a wash of sepia and red iron oxide and then
peeled off the masking fluid, which revealed a somewhat darker background
with a lighter image of the quail and the vortex. Then, I darkened the
ground with sepia and red iron oxide, which gave it the appearance of
the texture of stone, and added diagonal stripes of what appears to be
mortar.
Finishing
One of the exciting aspects of finishing a piece on Claybord™ is the ease of framing without glass. To protect and finish
off the piece, I airbrush two to three coats of Golden's UVLS polymer
varnish (70% gloss, 30% matte, 100% water). Strain the mixture through
a paper towel (doubled) each time before using. Now my collectors can
enjoy the luminous quality of my work without glass! |
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of the advantages of Claybord™ is that the thick clay surface
allows me to incise right into my paintings. I carved, sanded, and erased
through the acrylic paints with sgraffito methods to cause the ceramics
to look very, very old. I use razors, scratch knives, or just about anything
to work the clay surface of the board. I then painted in areas with sepia,
and highlighted them again by scratching back to the white of the board
or to a lighter layer of color underneath. Using these sgraffito methods
you would swear there were pits and holes in the ceramics. After I finished
carving into the surface, I went over all the painted patterns on the ceramics
where they are in direct light and applied a 50/50 wash of titanium white
to reemphasize the light. Then, I cut in highlights to define the worn spots. |
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For
more information about the artist, please write Rock Newcomb, 103 N. Bryce
Circle, Payson, AZ 85541 or fax 520-472-8792.
© 2001 Ampersand
Art Supply Inc. |