Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

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Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting

Transcript of Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

Page 1: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

Buddha in Progress:

Brett’s current large painting

Page 2: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

I start with an old, recycled door from the salvage yard.

Page 3: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

I sand off the old paint and fill the door knob handles.

Here is the door in my studio.

Page 4: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

Usually, I work with a blank background when

making these pieces. This time, I wanted to create more of a marriage between East and West, between textile and paint. So I decide to use Indian textile design for the background. I have several Indian

textile wood blocks, so I choose two and create a background.

Here are some of my Indian textile blocks.

Page 5: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

Here, you can see a zoomed-in

shot of the textile design I created using

the Indian wood blocks.

Page 6: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

Here is my first sketch of the Buddha head. There is a problem!

Page 7: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

As I look at the pencil sketch, I realize that the Buddha figure is placed too far to the right. I wanted the figure to be off-center, however, this seems too off-centered to me and I don’t like the way the hand became the centralized

focal point. So, I painted over the figure and started again.

Page 8: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

Here’s a close-up

view of the Buddha head

in the wrong place!

Page 9: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

After I re-place the figure, I lay the painting flat and draw the

quilt grid lines in red. I use two different colors (the black pencil for the image and the red for the

grid) so that I don’t become confused.

Page 10: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

Here, you can see the over-painted first sketch, the new pencil sketch of

the figure, and the red quilt grid lines.

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Painting begins.

I begin with a layer of red, carefully controlling

the values. For this painting, I’m using a six-step value system. I work from the darkest values and move to the lightest reds. I will paint the

entire piece in red, cover this with a protective

clear layer, and then move on to the next color

layer, again covering the entire piece with color. This will continue until the last color layer is complete, so I paint this

painting 5-6 times!

Here is one completed darkest red grid square (value 6) and a

partially completed value 5 grid square.

Page 12: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

Here again, you can see two

completed value 6 red grid squares and 2 partially completed value 5

red squares.

Page 13: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

Painting continues.

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Page 15: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

The completed red layer. The painting will need to dry for 3 days, after which a clear protective layer will be added and the second color layer can begin.

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A close-up view of the Buddha face.

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Here is the “finished” work. After the red layer, I painted the entire piece blue and then in purples/violets. I

finished with the top, green layer. You can see I have begun to abrade the surface so that the underlying blue,

violet, and red layers begin to re-surface in certain areas. The piece is not yet dry enough to continue with abrasion (it is monsoon season here and very rainy and humid). After 2 weeks, I will continue abrading and perhaps add gold leaf to

specific areas of the piece.

Page 18: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

Here is a close-up of the face. You can see the

abrasion beginning on the left eye, the right cheek, hair, the

background, and the hand. I do this in order to speak about the nature of the materials. I start with an old, unwanted door. I re-

surface and paint it, making it “new” again. I then want to age the piece, making it again seem old, yet no

longer unwanted.

I also like the idea of showing my ability to control the value of the color layers. No matter what color is showing, the image still makes sense

because the values are all the same.

Page 19: Buddha in Progress: Brett’s current large painting.

Other close-ups

This is the piece laying flat. It lies flat in order

for me to abrade (sand) the layers off.