May 30, 2009 3
Pods
In the process of experimenting with watercolor prints, I inadvertently created a unique watercolor painting.
While working on the print, I rested palm fiber cutouts on another sheet of watercolor paper in order to apply the paint. The different greens created an outline around the center white space that was covered by the cutouts. I liked this byproduct, but I also felt that there was something missing. The shapes looked like little empty pods that were just begging to be filled with ink drawings.
My next step was obvious, but since I only had the one painting, I explored a bunch of different patterns and textures in pods that I drew in my sketchbook.
After filling two sheets of paper with patterned pods, I was pretty happy with a number of them. When I sat down to do the final drawing the next day, the second page of sketches was mysteriously missing! I honestly have no idea where it could be, or how it could have gotten to wherever it is. I couldn’t remember all the pod patterns from the missing sheet, so I started a new set, scribbling down the ones that I could remember first and then adding new ones. I ended up doing one more page after that, for a total of 3. The missing sheet will have to remain a mystery to us all. Unless of course it turns up at some point.
If you want to take a look at the 3 pages of sketches in more detail, you can check them out here, here and here.
Perhaps it was lucky that my second page of sketches went missing since I ended up using a couple of patterns from the last 2 pages that I hadn’t developed in my first round of studies. I examined the different pods in the painting as individuals and as a group to decide where to draw the different patterns. I wanted to include a variety of patterns and textures that are each unique enough to add interest when viewed in detail, but that also share a similar visual “weight” so that no one pod would jump out from the others.
I (almost) accomplished achieving uniform visual weight amongst the different patterns. From further away, the one that sticks out is the chevron or braided pattern. When viewed closer, I don’t think it stands out quite as much.
Now that it’s done, there are a few adjustments I would have made if I could start over, but I’m going to leave well enough alone and call it done.
This was a fun and relatively easy project. What surprised me the most was that watercolor paper is actually very nice to draw on with rapidograph pens. I expected that the rough texture of the paper would make the act of drawing equally rough, but I was able to maintain very good control. The paper seemed to love the ink, and it didn’t bleed a bit.
For my next work I’m going to draw on bristol board and combine the drawing with cut up pieces of the green print since I wasn’t happy with the final result of that piece. I’m curious to see if it’ll be easier to draw on the bristol than the watercolor paper, or if I’m in for a surprise since the watercolor paper provided a surprisingly delightful drawing surface.













