You're probably wondering what happens to all the pieces left over from the jig-art. Ā Do…
The Cheetah Woman
After the painting experiment two days ago that I unwrapped yesterday, I had an overnight think and decided that I was going to press ahead and turn the abstract into the cheetah woman. Ā Here’s what I did today:
– I masked out the cheetah woman with masking tape! Ā Crazy idea but there were straight lines in the painting already and I wanted more. Ā There’s a nice positively painted negative triangle between the head and the supporting arm.
– Negatively painted the cheetah woman using the French ultramarine along the bottom. Ā I decided to let this blue also go into the white band below it, which I later regretted.
– Ā Negatively painted her along the top, initially in raw sienna. Ā I swept the strokes upwards to look like grasses. Ā The raw sienna was looking a bit monotone, so I added in the viridian, ultramarine and quinacridone magenta in places. Ā I was careful not to negatively paint the feet, not just because that would have been difficult but also because odd lost edge is good.
– Tried drawing tree branches in the top right and top left with masking fluid for variety and painting over them. Ā These didn’t really work out right, so I painted some foliage over them. Ā This also covered a lot of the white band in the top left.
– Added the usual finishing touches: lots of salt in the foliage, grass and shadows. Ā If it works, great. Ā If it doesn’t, then not a disaster. Ā And, because things were looking a bit dull and dark, I spatttered over my usual opaques: cadmium red, cadmium yellow, cerulean blue and titanium white. Ā I was careful to cover up the cheetah woman while doing the spattering.
– And at the end of all this, the thing I was most disappointed with was the former white bands that were now painted over but still visible. Ā They looked like a mistake that I was trying to disguise. Ā So I painted over them with titanium white to bring them back. Ā But they still didn’t look quite right, looking like bands for the sake of bands. Ā So I encouraged them to bleed downwards into the paint below, in what turned out to be quite pleasing patterns. Ā And I added a touch of ultramarine because white with a bit of blue shadow looks whiter than white on its own.
So, job done. Ā Is it better than its abstract predecessor? Ā I don’t know and don’t really want to think about that anyway. Ā Is it any good? Ā Well I say it is. Ā It’s crazy bonkers. Ā There are so many questions that this painting raises. Ā What is that leopard woman thing? Ā Does it have legs or does it have the body of a worm or a fish? Ā Is that grass behind it or flames? Ā What are the white bands? Ā Wooden beams? Ā Something covered in snow? Ā What are those cabbage lines? Ā What’s that spotty triangle in the top left corner? Ā And do I have this painting the right way round? Ā I’ve not even looked at the other three orientations.
This one was gifted to my sister in law.
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