The 1985 Turner Prize winner's paintings are often referred to as «pictorial objects,» and in two of the most experimental pieces — and the largest here, at nearly 7 by 9 feet each — he lets
the bare wood surfaces predominate.
Not exact matches
You can leave the
wood bare or cover it with a suitable
surface covering.
In the strongest work in this show, what look like cut - up scraps of painted canvas are really thick swaths of acrylic paint, peeled off a flat
surface and draped over
bare wood stretcher bars leaning against the wall.
Like the milk paint used in days of old, Thibeau's Old Fashioned Milk Paint will not rub or wash off, and it adheres like no other paint ever devised to
bare wood, plaster and other porous
surfaces.
You don't need to take the finish to the
bare wood, but use a hand block sander to rough up the
surface with 100 grit sandpaper.
Hi Diana — I always sand every piece, not to the
bare wood, but just to rough the
surface up.