Painting with Spray Paints
Painting with spray paint can be an exciting and challenging technique to add to any artist’s repertoire. Spray paint comes in a number of formats, allowing the artist to select tight control or a spontaneous, loose flow of paint.
Today’s spray systems are modern advancements on an old technique. Mouth atomizers have been used for many years, and the tools are still available. Technology has taken this to include airbrush systems and canned spray paints. All these tools expand the artist’s ability to create a diverse array of styles and techniques that brushwork could never imitate.
The Lips Have It
A mouth atomizer is a simple device that uses two hinged tubes. One tube is placed in the paint, the other in the mouth. Blowing through the tube sprays the paint on the support. This takes a bit of practice, but is a very effective and economical method of applying a texture-free layer of paint. It can be used with any water-based paint, such as acrylic and watercolor.
With a mouth atomizer, the artist can apply paint to a surface without danger of disturbing the preceding layers. A light mist of color can glaze over the surface, slightly changing the tone, or repeated application can build up the intensity. Depending on how hard the tube is blown, the effect can be random spattering or a soft, even wash of color.
Using this device, the artist has the use of all his water-based paints. He can mix colors specifically for his work and not rely on commercially produced aerosol can colors. It is also the most economical spray method available, as the device costs only a few dollars.
Airbrush Basics
Airbrush equipment is available in a wide range of price points, although relative...
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...daub the paint, adding texture to large areas. With a palette knife, sgraffito technique can then be used create the painting. Fingers are also useful tools for blending and manipulating the paint. Additional applications of medium extend the painting time and the variety of colors in the work.
This technique takes practice and will be a challenge to master, but it is a very rapid way to do a complete painting. It is perfect for an artist who does plein air exhibitions. Craft festivals and similar public events are great venues for this type of artwork demonstration, as it is fast and always draws a crowd.
Spray paint has many aspects and scores of techniques that can be used by a creative artist. Choosing just one can be hard, with so many alternatives to try out. Whichever one the student selects, he will find a new world of potential at his fingertips.
In this portrait the artist uses encaustic paint an art technique using resin and wax that creates a hard, wax dripping texture.
The paint is spread thinly along the surface showing no raised areas for texture. The objects within the painting have similar line weights. There are different directional lines as well
The Bob Ross painting method is the wet-in-wet technique. Artists have used this method for hundreds of years, and for the oil painter is the fastest method to use.
The identity of a graffiti artist is hardly ever known, but the style of the art is. They can be identified by the way they express themselves. It can be broad and can be shown in many different forms. The forms can range from a simple tag of identity, an expression of protest and politics, to an alluring scene of art work. Although the graffiti writers work is their expression; they are trying to convey a message about the issues in the world around them.
Pollock is most well known for his drip style painting method. This method is a type
himself through his mediums. He used oil on canvas for his medium in this painting. There are
Modern street art and graffiti are undeniably tied together. Graffiti could be considered the forefather of street art in many ways- it has paved the way for the development of modern street art. Yet, while both are still hotly debated topics, street art is seen in a more positive light while graffiti is still considered to be a negative term. Graffiti is associated with the vandalism that the government desperately wanted to erase. Graffiti has played a huge role in the development of street art that we all know today. Conklin notes this in her paper. She describes graffiti as an exclusive world that only those inside the group are privy to. However, to Conklin, street art is made accessible to all in that it is not necessarily exclusive and that anyone can understand street art, as it is supposed to be a way to communicate with their community. The very form of street art and graffiti differ from one another, as do their messages and end point. Graffiti is a tag of sorts- it relies mainly on text and is used to announce an individual. While some graffiti artists, like the Mission School did plan out their works, graffiti is more about the actual form of rebellion and establishing oneself than it is about the message that it is trying to get across. If it was more inclusive, it would be understandable to people outside to graffiti culture. Street art, on the other hand, takes its surroundings into consideration. Conklin herself notes that the term "street art" was supposed to be in an attempt to portray the work and other similar works in a more positive light. It should be noted, however, that street artists and graffiti artists have often clashed over a difference in opinions.
When I imagine an artist, I picture a Parisian dabbing at a sprawling masterpiece between drags on a cigarette seated in an extravagantly long holder. He stands amid a motley sea of color, great splashes of vermillion and ultramarine and yellow ochre hiding the tarp on the studio floor. Somehow, not one lonely drop of paint adorns his Italian leather shoes with their pointed toes like baguettes.
Moreover, the effect achieved by the current painting technique is often that of a human face behind glass or of a reflection rippling in the water surface: for instance, Shirley (2007), Susan (2011), Self-Portrait (1997) and others. Although these gridded paintings look fragmented from the small distance, they form an easily recognizable and identifiable figurative whole. The tendency towards application of pixelization in painting might be perceived as a skillful allusion to the legacy of Gustav Klimt, for Klimt, an Austrian Secessionist of the early 20th century, often ‘infused’ geometric elements similar to Close’ marks into his paintings. In other words, Close seems to have revived use of geometry in figurative depiction as he entered the third stylistic phase and endowed his photorealistic vision with more complex optical
It seems to be his style of painting, thick brush strokes. It is not simple, there is much to the painting, there is emotion in the painting. It is a stunning piece made by him.
Upon further review I was instantly intrigued by the technique in which it was created. Not a single brushstroke of what is commonly used in paintings but rather small perfectly round dots in vibrant yellows, greens, oranges, and blues. Small dots of color perfectly marrying together to form a single image. One could instantly imagine the painstaking hours and the amount of effort that went into creating such a beautiful piece.
With in graffiti there four main types: tagging, bombing, writing, and scratching. Tagging is when a graffiti artist puts their nickname in a personalized signature that all graffiti artists have. Bombing is basically just tagging as many times as you can in a specific area. Writing is when a graffiti artist paints graffiti lettering in different styles, to name a few: bubble, throw up, 3D, character, wild, blockbusters, and electical. Graffiti is usually posted illegally, so the artist has to come in quickly and neatly create their “tag,” then leave the scene in order to not get caught. Conversely, street art is usually created legally, so inturn, street artists have more time to do more with their art, which allows for a wider range of types of street art- this includes, painting, stencil painting, stickers, wheatpasting, sculpture installations, mosaics, chalk art, and even video projection. Though doing it illegally is still risky, with stenciling, stickers, and wheatpasting, the artists can create their design at home, and then quickly apply it once the get to the desired location. The fact that graffiti artists have to create entirely on the spot and try to get away with it also explains the differences in the culture and ideology between graffiti and street
No matter what people say about it, Graffiti is a form of self-expression. It is important to realize the amount of talent and work required to create a piece of graffiti. The scale of such a piece can be small found on a corner to massive one taking up an entire wall. However, there are varying
Graffiti started in the 1920s when gangs would tag train cars and walls to mark territory mainly in New York City. Graffiti took a different turn in the 1970s when young adults decided to use street art as an outlet to express their political and social outrage. This movement had soon gained the attention of the “adult” world. Graffiti was known as “creation through destruction” and to this day is still considered illegal in most parts of the world. In modern street art the mediums used have evolved past spray paint and now artists are using different methods with spray paint to progress their works past crude tags.
Graffiti refers to the act of writing words, symbols or graphics on private or public property. Graffiti dates back from Paleolithic times, but it has evolved through time. Graffiti artists use walls, trees rocks or any other surface as canvas to leave messages and express their feelings. Gangs use graffiti to communicate and mark their territories while political activists use it to make statements. In 1960s, graffiti became a form of art and a hobby to some artists. This form of artwork originated in Philadelphia and later migrated to other cities. During that time, it was seen as disrespectful and illegal act by the society, but those behind the graffiti movement saw it as a creative way of expression in an oppressive society. Graffiti art was an invention for people to express their political, social views and feelings (Burners). This research paper investigates the effect of graffiti to both the society and individual artist.