one or three or seven

This is a blog about painting (when isn’t it ha!), but its also a question or ponder on numbers. I am enamoured of one and three and seven for some reason. One is the whole, the circle, complete, closed, sun and moon. Three is balance, triangle, ancient symbol of spirit and unity, the trinity, starry, sharp, fulcrum, stable. Seven is mystical, magical, lucky, superstitious, dwarves, seventh son of seventh son, witches and wizardry. And all are prime numbers.
And how does this relate to painting? Only in a coincidental way:

I have been making a triptych (3 canvases that form one piece, I think, more later)
The paintings starting point was the view of the mountains on the road home from Letterkenny a few days ago. It was raining and the mountains were swathed in low cloud. Only really Muckish visible.

So I primed my 3 canvases, starting with a dark blue/purple that would eventually be revealed by solvent dribbles and scratches through the upper layers. Then a blue/turquoise. First photo:

image

The next day I added some green and a yellowish grey. This was printed over the top, by applying with a squeegee to grease proof paper on a rough textured surface, the pressing the mottled paint onto the canvas and smoothing over. Then some mark-making and ‘revealing’ with solvent to show the dark blue from underneath:

image

image

Meanwhile I was also working on a few small paper pieces, using the same colours and processes as I went along, and trying out some mark making too. The marks in these 2 are suggesting Muckish half covered in cloud. Incidentally these 2 are already sold!

image

image

The next day I felt that the works lacked depth somehow, and also I didnt like how the colour ‘blocks’ formed an unattractive lumpy ‘horizon line’ accross the 3 canvases. Maybe they aren’t one work but 3. So I separated them slightly. Then added some new colours, ochre and a darker grey, and rolled over the whole effect, making it more homogenous in the process

image

Ok, so back to the question of one or three or seven. As I separated the 3 canvases, I was thinking about 3 sisters, myself and my 2 older sisters in my 3 child family, and the ‘3 sisters’ of the 3 canvases, separate as well as connected. Then I remembered that the range of mountains on the road home from Letterkenny has 7 peaks, known affectionately as the Seven Sisters. They are Errigal, Machocht, one whose name I dont know, the 3 Aghlas and Muckish at the end. We can see Errigal and the Aghlas from our house.

So, these are either one work or three connected works, inspired by and featuring the seven sisters

image

image

image

and they might not be finished yet

black cow

image

image

image

image

2 works on paper

image

3 small works on canvas

image

image

adding contrasting layers

image

black cow on canvas 80cm sq

image

black cow 6it *sigh*)cm sq (undercoating was similar, not shown)

image

2 finished pieces, black cow 1& 2

image

undercoating 3 canvases 80cm sq (& 1 canvas 60cm sq, not shown) nb. this pic should NOT be at the bottom, but I cant move it *sigh*

magenta & gold

image

image

2 postcard sized pieces on watercolour paper c.10 x 15cm

image

image

image

& 3 pieces c. A4 sized (32 x25cm)
from a group of 11 works on paper in gold and magenta oil with cold wax medium just completed.
An experiment included in the process this time of painting a layer of crimson house paint ( matt emulsion) above the gesso priming layer and below the first layer of magenta oil and wax. I am pleased with the result that the scraped lines have a more solid red effect than if they scraped right through to the paper because the emulsion is so opaque and has such dense coverage

dark orchids

the next (final?) stage of the painted over panels

image

they started like this, with a new bottom layer (over the previously painted panels) or rich alizarin crimson

image

then powder pigment, mark making, blues and turquoises laid over with a squeegee

image

image

then finally a few more layers of darker colours and a touch of gold

image

image

2 details, one from each panel