Subject: Grammar of Color
Grammar of Color Vol 3 No 4 "Over the Horizon" Part 3 on Solid Supports As both a painter and a curiosity seeker, I cannot help but take note of the progress in both the art materials world and the commercial paint industry. In making solid painting supports, we opened the door to using commercial products when polyurethane was proposed as a moisture barrier for panels. Polyurethane is one of the high performance commercial items that has applicability for artists. Further, hardboard and plywood are not made exclusively as a painting support. It is part of a much larger enterprise that covers many facets of the building trade industry under the heading of manufactured wood. We need to look further into the progress the commercial coatings industry has made to test products that are applicable to panel making. For example, polyurethanes come in a variety of formulations. It is not a homogenous, generic product. Hardboards and plywood are of different species, use a host of manufacturing processes and contain resins that are not uniform across the fabrication process. Here is the direction that I am looking toward. I am being purposefully vague because these ideas are in a gel stage and I do not wish for anyone to experiment with commercial materials and come back to me saying that I ruined their work of art because of a suggestion that I provided. We need to carefully examine the commercial materials we employ in works of art to see if they are still performing to our expectations. Formulations change and the resin, solvents or adhesives being introduced now may not have desirable properties. Modifications are being made to products to improve them from a competitive perspective. While it may improve them in terms of application, stability or delamination, the changes may have cheapened them so that they will not have long-term durability. We need to examine priming systems. My emphasis is on the term system. Surface preparations for solid supports require commercial products and professional painters recommend several preparatory treatments that are standard protocols in the commercial painting world. Priming of the surface is consistently emphasized in trade literature. New primers, sealers and surface coatings have appeared that require careful evaluation. Moisture adsorption has been researched for decades. Some old methods have repeated appeared in the literature for sealing solid supports that still hold great promise. These materials might provide better moisture fighting properties than the coatings we commonly use today. The key is to find a solution that is environmentally friendly, put the artist's safety at the forefront and does a superior job with minimal effort. Some of the old standards cited in wood research literature could play an important role in creating high performance solid painting supports. One of the most promising additives that has been written about and tested is aluminum flake powder. It was the darling of the coatings industry for moisture suppression. That was big news nearly 50 years ago. New substrates are appearing and gaining a foothold in the artists' market. Hardboard is one of many engineered wood types that are available. Products that have been in the commercial market are gaining popularity but have little exposure or testing in the art world. We need to understand these products better before endorsing them and counting on them to perform as required. In summary, well made hardboard and a few selected plywood types show great promise for long-term stability, especially if prepared correctly. Polyethylene is one of the top performers for blocking rapid moisture transfer. It can be improved with additives that are fairly easy to obtain. A number of specialty primers applied over the wood sealing polyurethane may offer a means of better adhesion for acrylic grounds than the traditional method of light sanding. Testing has been done to gauge the compatibility of primers with acrylic grounds. This work is especially important to those who wish to paint outdoor murals where priming is critical to adhesion of the acrylic ground and subsequent layers of paint. The application of primed canvas to engineered wood is fairly straightforward. Better adhesives might be available that not only provide good bonding of the canvas with the wood board, but offer some long-term protection of the canvas due to chemical changes in the glue. There is lots of work to be done. I hope we can share in this dialogue and collectively find solutions to the changes taking place in the solid painting support world. Our painting legacy may depend upon how we act now as changes in commercial materials force artists to make critical choices. Stay tuned. Need something to read between Grammar of Color issues? See my blog "Anatomy of Art Materials" <URL:http://www.artistsmagazine.com/artmaterials/> More Grammar of Color issues and blog entries will be coming as we start our fall lecture season. *** Conservation DistList Instance 21:22 Distributed: Monday, September 10, 2007 Message Id: cdl-21-22-016 ***Received on Thursday, 16 August, 2007