The Rookery
© 2016
Media: oil & mastic on acrylic on layered plexiglass panels
Location: in a collection
36 x 30 inches / 91 x 77 cm
Embedded in the paint are faint traces of the nautical chart of the surrounding water.
My fascination with layered imagery started with pentimento, the effect that happens as oil paint cures and becomes more and more translucent. There’s a famous Winslow Homer seascape with a ship on the horizon and next to it a pale copy of the same ship. He decided he didn’t like where it was, so he painted it over with sky and repainted it to one side of the first. Decades later, the first ship has emerged through the overpainting as the ghost ship.
Vermeer and Rembrandt and other old masters used many layers of glazing: a little pigment and a lot of oil. After 500 years of pentimento, the 50 layers of glaze on a face become luminous, a catch basin for light bouncing around in the different layers.
It’s a tricky technique, glazing with oil, because if you use just a bit too much oil it will yellow, a putrid sort of yellow. A lot of contemporary painters have tried to mine this technique and none have really come through without the paintings turning putrid. But if you switch to acrylic, you are free to use almost as much clear medium as you want. My experiments there only drove me further into transparency, and so I painted this on clear Plexiglas panels.
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For those of you with low vision:
This painting depicts the open doorway and interior of an old beach house in muted sienna colors, layered with two other images from the same house to create its own composition, one that's strongly patterned with diagonals and echoing rectilinear shapes. One image layer has a view out a window to blue water. The open screen door in the foreground leads your view into a darker interior, to see a sliver of a tall director's chair with green canvas back in a mostly empty space, and behind that to a window of blue sky over green. This is made in transparent paint on three layers of plexiglas that form a shallow translucent box filled with ambient light. Superimposed across the entire painting, only barely percepible until you draw closer, is a pale rendering of a nautical chart of that seashore.