martha, do you know any methods for creating whitenoise (like on a tv set to a non-channel) using DRY medium?
i've decided to make randomness my midterm and am looking for any help i can get.
so far i've just been layering blacks, greys and whites and removing them, smearing them with my hands, etc. but eventually i want to make it look grainy like tv static.
hi marc - thanks! re:white noise - try this: paint a layer of black ink and let it dry, then draw over it using the side of a white pastel. (i like rembrandt pastels - peel the paper off of it first!)
I am an artist, an art teacher, a mother of five children, and a grandmother of four, and I live with my husband and our two cats in the woods of Woolwich, Maine. I teach drawing classes through the Continuing Studies Department at Maine College of Art in Portland, and now privately in my new (!) studio @ 72 Front Street, Bath. My blog 'Martha Miller' shares my art, my process, and my inspirations, and my blog 'Not Bad Thing' showcases my daughter Lisbeth's artwork and process. It is also where I share my experience as a mother of an adult child with special needs. You can see more of my artwork on my website @ www.marthamiller.com
4 comments:
Looks like a set on stage in a theater.
Why aren't you Using them as a basis for a composition.
these are cool!
martha, do you know any methods for
creating whitenoise (like on a tv set to
a non-channel) using DRY medium?
i've decided to make randomness my midterm
and am looking for any help i can get.
so far i've just been layering blacks,
greys and whites and removing them,
smearing them with my hands, etc.
but eventually i want to make it look
grainy like tv static.
thanks?
marc.
hi sue - yes, it does!
hi brad - good idea!
hi marc - thanks! re:white noise - try this: paint a layer of black ink and let it dry, then draw over it using the side of a white pastel. (i like rembrandt pastels - peel the paper off of it first!)
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