Jules

Sep 3, 20212 min

Absorbent Ground

Updated: Sep 19, 2021


 
A little while ago I mentioned on Instagram that I was trying to achieve a bit more of the effects that I get from paper, on canvas. One of the ways that I thought would help was by using Golden’s Absorbent Ground. It’s aimed at watercolourists who want to work on canvas, but equally works with fluid acrylics.

I put two coats of it on this already canvas, which I had previously gesso’d with normal gesso and painting an underpainting with fluid acrylics (only to realise I had placed the image too centrally and needed to move it).

So this is the result - quite an interesting effect. I used a stiff-ish brush and some fluid paints with water. It’s absorbed in a little and has dried to a rather matte finish. It will be interesting to see what layers on top of this does.

Update:

I decided to use the absorbent ground on a different painting in the mean time (a larger 91cm square one), using the similar process I mentioned above. The coating of it is really absorbent (unsurprisingly), and seems to soak in like a piece of paper would, no matter how many coats you use. It says that you can do a layer of medium over the whole thing to seal it, which I did (as one of the things I enjoy is being able to wipe off bits immediately if I've done it wrong).

However, the layer of medium didn't seem to provide a massive barrier. It was better, but not sealed. I realised I had to be super careful when I was painting, or else it would soak right in. It even had a similar effect at the end after having used an isolation coat, and then the varnish. Upshot it, it creates a very interesting effect, and seems less glossy than straight gesso+acrylic. I wonder how it would fare with thicker acrylic paints on top. Perhaps the soaking in would be reduced.

Painting created with absorbent ground. See how the brushstrokes are quite prominent and chalky.

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