Sometimes things can go wrong and you realize that drawing is bad and you have spoiled the page. For me the best way to deal with the frustration is to cover moleskine page with layer of gesso, leave it to dry and make an oil painting on top of it to finally sweep my disaster under the rug of daily routine without tearing the page out from the sketchbook.
This was a meditation on the film still from the Nolan's "Dunkirk" - movie incredible in many ways. I was contemplating this outstanding story of converting seemingly inevitable defeat to the foundation of the future victory.
Sometimes I paint even in smallest sketchbooks as well
Hey there! Wonderful paintings, upvoted!
I just received my first moleskine sketchbook as a gift. Previously I had always owned cheaper sketchbooks and now I have the fear of messing up this moleskine! So oil painting to cover unwanted mistakes might be the perfect trick to get me over my fears, but I had a few technical questions:
Do you ever run into the problem of not being able to close your sketchbook or turning to another page to create smth new because oil takes so long to dry?
Is the gesso completely necessary or is it optional? What about if you are only painting on an empty page? (my sketchbook's pages are 160 g)
Looking forward to your answer and more lovely painting of yours!
Hello there ;) Good questions!
I leave my sketchbooks open until paint is dry, it can takes day or two so I just use other sketchbooks - I normally use 3-4 of them, 2 pocket-sized, 1 bigger and 1 with toned paper for value studies. You can also use mediums to increase drying time, or paint thinly, or use flake white instead of titanium white. Hope it helps
You can try to paint without grounding but paper will meet paint aggresively and I'm not sure about longivity of the page afterwards.. I like to paint on ground - more predictable and smooth and you can erase.
Concerning cheaper sketchbooks - use all the spectrum, I like to use newsprint paper or just printer paper to make gesture sketches, quick warmups et cetera. We should never skimp on paper and materials but we can treat expensive ones respectfully I believe.
Happy painting!
very nice in depth answer
Thanks so much for taking the time to write this detailed answer.
How do you view your sketchbook? I find this varies a lot from artist to artist. But do you see it as a place to better your technical skills/jot down ideas/come up with concept/experiment or do you see it more as an artwork in its own?
I think latter is closer to me... Especially when I draw with ballpoint pen - I do it only in small sketchbooks and mostly when I am out of studio.
So far living everything I'm seeing. When I was growing like you I would grab everything and they tiniest of papers to draw or paint. You are not so strange at all, but you are quite talented. Makes me wish I could go back to doing things that way. Anyway, I am now following. You've a new fan.
Sooo talented :) Keep up the work !!
this is so awesome! really would like to learn oils someday :((