2D (BTS 01): The Blue Ink Girl’s Research on Artists

377356

Madness in volume, passion and texture. Rolled in 1 swirl. Perfection. Have got to adopt this cliche but glorious Vincent Van Gogh technique.

Tawara Yusaka‘s works have always been intense. His goal is to contain energy in brushstrokes, which I do feel from his work. There is a variation of pressure, texture, lightness and spaces. But there’s also a focus. That’s how I want to work things out, be it in art or in life.

Koichi Yamamoto‘s fascinating liquid-like atmospheres. It really stimulates the mind with its soothing vibes.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

drip-art-painting-omg-no13

Jackson Pollock‘s famous drip painting technique. There’s something about how the paint connects to each other, as if a system, that appeals to human brain. Maybe we like our talent for making logic linkages too much.

The reductive technique is notably visually attractive. Still Pollock in this piece.

pollock-binary

Organised chaos. Pollock.

Cai Guo Qiang‘s gunpowder painting might be too violent for me, but I do appreciate how an action/movement creates marvelous designs that are unique to the motion. Let’s try collecting different movements on paper and see which creates a pattern I would like to replicate in my monoprint pieces (since they’re much cleaner and consistent anyway).

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Simplicity and Clarity in form and structure is what I can appreciate in Franz Kline‘s work. It’s not so much about the meaning of his work, for he himself said that he preferred portraying emotion than images for one to tap into his/her associative memory. Sure, it may not be the most comprehensible picture, but It does make me feel. I want to be able to make another person feel when they look at my art, too.

2D: The Blue Ink Girl’s MonoPrints

IMAG9673

Swiper no swiping. Of brushes.

IMAG9674

Dusting the paper. Made it dirtier than cleaner. Irony.

IMAG9675

Press the Paintbrush for a free . . . style pattern.

IMAG9676

So this is what you’re doing to your car windows everytime you clean it with that bristly thing.

IMAG9677

First attempt @ Reductive method by making patterns on the inked sheet.

IMAG9678

Let’s be economical and make 3 in 1. Use of various materials from the basket.

IMAG9679

Swirl it like Van Gogh part 2.

IMAG9680

This looks like an amateur Mr James R.eads work. 

 

IMAG9681

Van Gogh try-hard part 1.

IMAG9683

I like them astronomical prints!

IMAG9682

Multiple bark strips.

IMAG9684

Too ambitious. Tried creating 5 patterns on 1 sheet.

IMAG9685

Minimalistic . . . But then! What’s that thing under the mat-

IMAG9686

Let’s keep it light to make it bright.

IMAG9687

Fluid floating shapes which captures so much movement ! Oddly it looks like a chinese painting.

IMAG9688

Why not vertical.

IMAG9690

Let’s try different amounts of ink, and different ways of rolling the ink on, under or above the paper.

IMAG9689

More experiments with the under/above paper method.

IMG_20150821_201432

Unacceptable blue ink over vines and fragrance beads and roots.

IMG_20150821_201635

Scratch the ink surface, put textures at different areas, roll ink on top with varying pressures.

IMG_20150821_201812

Pressure playing.

IMAG9671

Smack the ink on.

IMAG9672

Roll in many directions, overlapping is fine.

IMAG9673

Directional brush strokes.