entry posted on October 13, 2009

Stranger surfaces to paint on.

posted in Analog, Murals   tagged , , , ,   1 Comment

I’ve never taken one of my finished paintings apart before-- stretched, folded, rolled, shipped, framed, unframed, cut off the bars, glued down, all of these violences I have done to my creations but this was a new one on me. Preparing the vertical blinds as blinds after completing the painting was kind of anticlimactic as an artist, though essential as a craftsperson and makes for some unique pictures.

 

first round of blind preparation

first round of blind preparation

vertical blinds on the table

vertical blinds on the table

the wicked surface

the wicked surface

 

This last picture shows pretty well the second and third levels of hell, I mean challenge, of painting the vertical blind surface with a coherent image (and not just an abstracted pattern). Not only was this mural painted on 122 overlapping “pieces” which have to line up properly for the image to be clear, but each piece is machined with 1/8″ vertical grooves and extruded from plastic to boot. Prep, paint adhesion and just trying to put down a straight, beautiful line (or a thousand of them, we are talking about drawing architecture here) were all special cases requiring more thought and attention than usual.

One Response to Stranger surfaces to paint on.

  1. Campbell Baird says:

    Very well presented, John- just glad I didn’t have to do this- I think I would have gone CRAAAAAAZY

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