DaneBramage
Member
I am very fond of a quote from Contemporary artist Paul Gardner- “A painting (model) is never finished - it simply stops in interesting places.”
So here's the Ketzer- tried to play with some ideas- first with an "asymmetric" placement on the base- the 'lean" was to suggest motion (something akin to Bernini's David), second with layering on the painting of the 4 color camo.each color was applied with a clear layer on each- then I tried to use the Hinterhalt-Tarnung Disc method used late in WWII. It worked in some places and didn't in others. The effect was surprising when I washed it I could see something cool happening with the layers. Anyway, to quote Gardner I stopped at an interesting place. Let me know what you think
So here's the Ketzer- tried to play with some ideas- first with an "asymmetric" placement on the base- the 'lean" was to suggest motion (something akin to Bernini's David), second with layering on the painting of the 4 color camo.each color was applied with a clear layer on each- then I tried to use the Hinterhalt-Tarnung Disc method used late in WWII. It worked in some places and didn't in others. The effect was surprising when I washed it I could see something cool happening with the layers. Anyway, to quote Gardner I stopped at an interesting place. Let me know what you think







