View allAll Photos Tagged acrylic
Acrylic on canvas panel, 11"x14". I have no idea what to call this thing ... or what strange part of my subconscious mind it came from ....
16x20" Acrylic Abstract Painting on Canvas "S6 LXX"
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Abstract spin painting number 21, acrylic on canvas, 30x24cm. Visit my website at www.markchadwick.co.uk to see more of my work. Thanks for viewing!
16x20" Acrylic Abstract Painting on Canvas "S6 LXXI"
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Mixed media photomanipulation combining a sunset scene from the Edwards Ferry area of the C&O Canal, Maryland (USA), and an abstract acrylic texture.
Special thanks to artist Lara Mukahirn for hand painting the acrylic texture elements as a personal commission, and granting me permission to publish this resulting image.
This photo is offered under a standard Creative Commons License - Attribution 3.0 Unported. It gives you a lot of freedom to use my work commercially as long as you credit and link back to this image on my Flickr page.
Flickr resolution: 1800 x 1200 px
Also available for download at 5000 x 3333 px on my Patreon page, an ever-growing collection of high res images for one low monthly subscription fee. You can find this specific photo at the following post:
www.patreon.com/posts/acrylic-potomac-23231557
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Minor note: Despite the geotagging placing this image in Loudoun, Virginia, this is in fact pinned on the Maryland side of the map if you zoom in close enough. I'm guessing it's a technical glitch as the river basically separates both states.
Mixed media artwork combining a wide-angle pier photo from Assateague State Park in Maryland (USA), and an abstract acrylic texture processed with a mix of sepia and greyscale tones for a more vintage & rustic appearance.
Special thanks to artist Lara Mukahirn for hand painting the acrylic texture elements as a personal commission, and granting me permission to publish this resulting image.
This photo is offered under a standard Creative Commons License - Attribution 3.0 Unported. It gives you a lot of freedom to use my work commercially as long as you credit and link back to this image on my Flickr page.
Flickr resolution: 1800 x 1200 px
Also available for download at 5000 x 3333 px on my Patreon page, an ever-growing collection of high res images for one low monthly subscription fee. You can find this specific photo at the following post:
16x20" Acrylic Abstract Painting on Canvas "S6 LV"
Make This Painting Yours www.etsy.com/listing/236980449
Browse My Etsy Shop www.etsy.com/shop/UnconventionalPaint
Like on www.facebook.com/UnconventionalPaint
Follow on www.twitter.com/unconpaint
Dust, 1999, acrylic on panel, 27" x 27"
This painting (currently on long term loan by Eric Brecher to the Minneapolis Institute of Arts) is a companion piece to the painting Terra Luna which is in the collection of the Minneapolis Institute of Art. In case it isn't obvious, this painting is a self-portrait and Terra Luna is a portrait of my wife Sherrie. I'm not sure, but the 1999 exhibition I had at the Chicago Cultural Center might have been the last time these two paintings were shown together. I'm glad that they are now in the same place.
This a photo of a section of an abstract acrylic painting that I did a while ago. The image has been mirrored and copied twice to be symmetrical. The detail is best seen full screen.
Although I've been feeling unwell, I didn't want to spend the day in bed, as it would have probably made me feel worse, so yesterday I decided to have another art session. I'd forgotten this set of acrylic paints hiding in the drawer, and was keen to have another go at painting, rather than drawing with my beloved watercolour pencils. It's harder than I remember, and both of these pictures are rejects, in my eyes! I'm sure I produced better artwork years ago when I was at school! Maybe it's because we had to use much bigger paper then, and there was more room for the detail I like to do. Just excuses, I guess, but I thought I'd put them up on Flickr anyway, as a record and to see what opinions my friends have!
(My full set is here.)
Acrylic paints leftover from my latest masterpiece....I have to say that the left over paints are probably more inspiring than the painting!
Acrylic gel lift (not transfer). I've been playing with this technique, trying - with limited success - to imitate Polaroid emulsion lifts. I don't care for the cloudiness caused by remnant paper fibers in most gel lifts I've tried, so instead of printing the image on paper, I printed the image on inkjet transparency film and coated it with acrylic gel. After that I treated the film just as you would for a Polaroid lift. Tricky, delicate business, at best. Sometimes the gel dissolves and smears the ink, sometimes the gel lifts but the image doesn't, but if you get just the right combinations of transparency, gel, and printer, it works, sort of... This one is Liquitex matte medium on HP inkjet transparency film (a thrift store find), printed on my trusty Epson R2400 - K3 inks. Lifted and "floated" onto cold press watercolor paper. The image was captured with my iPhone and the Hipstamatic package that makes things look like tintypes. The wrinkles are mine :) Image is about 5x5in.