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How handmade paper paintings are created
04/18/2008 07:43:06 / full of life
Thanks to everyone who has asked about my medium. My work is created with handmade paper pulp. No paint of any kind is used on the surface of my work. Hopefully, this explanation taken from my web site will help explain the process further. I'd appreciate any comments from viewers about the clarity of the explanation:did you learn about the papermaking process by viewing my blog?;are you inclined to try papermaking after reading about the process? Feel free to ask any further questions! Enjoy! Meg Black
         
 
A Step-by-Step Description of How Handmade Paper Art Is CreatedThe most common question I hear from other artists, galleries, and collectors is “How do you create your artwork?” That is, how do I paint with pulp and how do I make the paper on which I paint? In response, I have outlined, step-by-step, the process of creating one of my paintings. People are often surprised when they realize how very physical a medium paper pulp is, due to its weight and texture. It is shapeless and colorless when first beaten, and because it remains immersed in water until needed, it is also cold and sticky to the touch. As the creative process unfolds, the pulp takes on a marvelous life of its own. The unique properties of the pulp remain evident in the work, and help to define it with texture and unevenness. When the pulp comes together as one unit or composition, a work of art exists. Even though I am constantly learning new ways to express myself with the pulp, years of working with this material allow me to know its potential and limitations. These years of experience have yielded, and refined, the papermaking process described here.
STEP ONE: Forming the base sheet First, I beat a mixture of 1 lb. raw cotton and ½ lb. bleached abaca with approximately 10 gallons of water for an hour in a paper beater (called a Hollander due to its resemblance to the water wheel commonly seen in the Netherlands). Liquid sizing, which strengthens the paper and protects the surface from pollutants, is added to the pulp before removing it from the beater. This step is especially important should the painting be hung without glass. I then empty the pulp from the beater into a 40-gallon barrel and, using a pan, pour it onto polymer screening which has been laid flat on the surface of a vacuum table (Fig. 1).
The grids in the screening allow excess water from the pulp to drain and eventually exit through an opening in the bottom of the table. Once the pulp is poured, I fold over the screening at the corners to make a more even sheet (Fig. 2). STEP TWO: Applying the background and middle-ground colors
After the sheet is formed I add background colors by pouring layers of different-colored pulps, which have been stored in 5-gallon buckets, on top of the base sheet (Fig. 3). I have already tinted the colors with pure, non fading pigments such as cobalt, carbon, and titanium. Because the colors are light-fast (non fading), the finished painting can be hung with or without glass, in direct sunlight. For the more detailed, middle-ground areas, I paint using a turkey baster or bottle of over-beaten abaca.
I use the turkey baster to extract the water/pulp mixture from smaller containers (Fig. 4). I mix the over-beaten abaca, which has been beaten for up to six hours, with the pure pigment and Tororo-neri (a sticky extract from the root of the Japanese okra plant). I funnel this mixture into a squeeze bottle whose small opening allows for more precise mark making. STEP THREE: Collage

As the painting progresses, I sometimes cut collage elements of dried handmade paper and place them onto the wet surface (Figs. 5 and 6). I glue the collage paper to the base sheet with methyl cellulose, an archival glue naturally produced by fiber plants such as cotton and hemp. The process of layering colored pulp, over-beaten abaca, and collage elements continues through the evolution of the artwork. STEP FOUR: Painting the foreground After the background and middle ground are complete, I apply the final layer, or foreground (Fig. 7). At this time I also configure the last of the collaging, turkey basting, and application of over-beaten abaca (Fig. 8). I find this to be the most painstaking part of the process; the outcome of this final stage often determines the success of the overall composition.
If I deem a painting unsuccessful, it is recycled back into pulp by being shredded and re-hydrated in the Hollander. The newly recycled pulp can then be used for future base sheets. FINAL STEPS After the painting is finished, I place a plastic drop cloth over the vacuum table and attach a shop vacuum to an opening on the underside of the table. When the vacuum is turned on, the suction of air causes the plastic to shrink-wrap itself to the artwork, thus removing the bulk of the water. After turning off the vacuum and removing the plastic, I remove the artwork from the table and place it under a wool blanket. I then place weights on the blanket to prevent warpage, which is a constant problem during the week to ten days it takes for the paper to dry. And because a certain amount of changes occur during the drying process, the final look of a painting may not be revealed until it is completely dry.



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