Wednesday, April 30, 2008
Tuesday, April 29, 2008
Sunday, April 27, 2008
Silence is Their Tool
Silence is Their Tool
(Different Does Not Equal Deficient)
© 2008 Mark Patro
8"x11"
People in same sex relationships are denied complete equality under the law of the United States solely because of xenophobic and homophobic reasons which are primarily justified by ancient religious cultural language and doctrine which places more respect on tradition than on human dignity. Speak up.
Sunday, April 20, 2008
The Weight of the World
© 2008 Mark Patro
36 " x 39"
(The following words are written on the surface of the painting.)
"The world is not perfect. I am not perfect. You are not perfect because your mother is not perfect. Her teachers were not perfect. Religion is far from perfect. Your father and my father are not perfect. There are many things in this world that will never be perfect. All we can do is whatever we do. The burden of the world is that we want it perfect in our own way. It will never happen. We can, however, work toward it."
Thursday, April 17, 2008
Tuesday, April 15, 2008
Saturday, April 12, 2008
Friday's effort
Yesterday I worked on developing some painted fabrics to use in "Size Queen." They are intentionally simple because they will be used in the shadow side of the face.
These plain muslin fabrics were "painted" by mixing several acrylic paint colors together and diluting them with water. Some of the spots materialize by not completely mixing the paint. Some of spots were added and allowed to dissolve into the wet fabric.
This process reflects how the color fields in my quilt evolve. Using two similarly colored fabrics, sometimes commercially available, and sometimes personally painted, I cut them into strips about 1 1/2" wides and sew them together alternately. Then I cut the sewn together strips into 1 1/2" wide strips (ninety degrees to the original cut) and sew them together in a checker board pattern. The third image is the result.
These plain muslin fabrics were "painted" by mixing several acrylic paint colors together and diluting them with water. Some of the spots materialize by not completely mixing the paint. Some of spots were added and allowed to dissolve into the wet fabric.
This process reflects how the color fields in my quilt evolve. Using two similarly colored fabrics, sometimes commercially available, and sometimes personally painted, I cut them into strips about 1 1/2" wides and sew them together alternately. Then I cut the sewn together strips into 1 1/2" wide strips (ninety degrees to the original cut) and sew them together in a checker board pattern. The third image is the result.
Sunday, April 6, 2008
More Progress on "Size Queen"
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