As I teach, judge, visit exhibitions and look at work in books or across social media, I see bits and pieces of paintings that cause me to think about how a particular effect or even
a type of brush stroke could impact my own work.
Using the appropriate
type of brush strokes and type of brush will make achieving that result easier.
Not exact matches
There are visible
brush strokes, which is common for this
type of finish.
If not quite stereotypical, these Leigh «
types» are certainly drawn in the broad est
of brush strokes.
But while these latter exude the deceptive air
of being textured, they are in reality characterized by absolute flatness, each
stroke of paint being executed with an extremely fine
brush of the
type commonly employed in the sphere
of vehicle bodywork repair.
That is evident in her «Spachtelarbeit» [Palette - knife Works] in which she used that tool to avoid the hand - drawn, subjective traces
of a
brush stroke, and in her «Rasterbild» [Grids], in which various
types of marks were rapidly repeated, laid out in skewed lines.
Can you use the chalk paint on doing a window in my kitchen??? If so how do you get it without having the
brush strokes??? What
type of brush should be used??? Thank you,