Saturday, March 16, 2019

PRAYER FLAGS and the Reductive/Subtractive Technique


A technique called reductive or substractive has been highlighted in this blog before.  

Today's post won't repeat those directions with those step-by-step photos; instead, it will show a new stretched canvas with a background created almost entirely with this technique.

The stencil used in today's project is my 9" x 12" Prayer Flags --





 Below are three close-ups showing different areas of the stretched canvas....



Above:  This reductive/subtractive area was done with Titanium White acrylic paint over a multi-hued background.



Above:  After the reductive technique was used in this area, I came back in with diluted acrylic paint and added these orange highlights.

Above:  This reductive/subtractive area was done with Titan Buff acrylic paint over a multi-layered background.  One of the background layers had undergone the same technique, but with blue paint.
Above:  a close-up of the focal point when the painting is near completion.  The blue foreground is the stencil itself, stained and added with heavy matte medium to become a collage element.

Above:  The entire canvas, at the point of near-completion.

Below:  Note the right side of the canvas, now that an art crayon has been used to add a blue line.  This line was then covered with matte medium to set it permanently in place.


The final version appears above; its title is Go Fly a Kite!

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