My friend and fellow artist Sue Parry recently attended an exhibit in San Antonio of enhanced oil monotypes by Marcia Gygli King, and we were INSPIRED!
Yesterday we decided to "play" around with monotypes. Using water-based monotype paint, we had enormous fun exploring the possibilities of printing on both white and black and adding to the resulting images, which we pulled by hand. Although I had done monotypes before, and even used them with my young students, I hadn't done any in quite a while.
We learned a great deal, by trial and error, and with a few gleaned instructions from Julia Ayres' valuable book Monotypes. Of course, we didn't want to let the lack of facts interfere with our time allotted for playing, so we didn't do much study. We just rocked along, making it up as we went. The creative juices really flowed!
As King works frequently on black canvas, we were led to try printing on black paper. In this case we only had Canson, so that's what we used. The results, as this one example shows, were pleasing, even though the paper tended to stretch and buckle as it dried. I believe we can flatten these out, using the method of lightly dampening the back of the paper again and weighting it down under a flat board (face down, to preserve the image).
After our session, I searched on Google and found some YouTube videos about monotypes which added to my body of knowledge. I DO have to resist going too far down THIS rabbit-trail!! One of my favorites was called "MonoMovie about Monotypes." Another showed a multiple-edition result from one drawing, using printing inks (click here). Altogether, a fascinating, multi-approach process which seems to allow almost any wet medium to be used on several different supports and with or without a press.
If you're feeling a bit bogged down and need some inspiration, maybe playing with monotypes is just what you need!
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