This article is written by Francesca Albini
Looking at the speed at which my paper recycling box fills up every week, I’ve been exploring various ways of making art with junk mail. The simplest way is to use it is as an interesting background for mixed media work.
In this picture of dancers in the woods, I glued torn pieces of coloured junk mail to a board. When the glue was dry, I sanded the whole surface to make it blend together more and take the excessive gloss out of the paper. I then added glazes of my home made pink gel pen ink. I also made a rough contour of the pieces with my ball point ink and a very dry brush. The trees are also painted with ball point ink. I gave the impression of grass with children’s green day-glo paint. Lastly, I painted the dancers in gesso and contoured them with a toothpick dipped in ball point ink. The sun through the branches is done with a yellow highlighter spread with a wet brush.
Another way of using junk mail is to cover it in gesso and then paint, write, collage over it. Of course, while junk mail is free, gesso is very expensive. So here’s how to make your own super cheap one. Next time you decorate, keep your unused water based white wall paint (or use white acrylic paint). Mix the paint with baby powder (possibly unscented!) and pva. Now you are ready to cover in gesso tons of useless leaflets. I make as much gesso as I need on the day, so I don’t know if it can be stored.
You can use the paper to make single artworks, or sew them together into a junk mail journal. I wanted to challenge myself here and decided to do a “Raphael” on a gessoed leaflet. I used washes of children’s gouache and was quite pleased with the way in which the support received the paint. I found it sturdier and more forgiving than watercolour paper, and I like the little bit of texture coming through the gesso.
Of course, junk mail can be used to do fun collages, as well. I seem to receive a lot of pizza leaflets, so I made a pizza-man out of them. The funny character was then scanned into the computer and given a digital background.
Enjoy your junk mail, and make great art with it!
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Francesca is a visual artist using pretty much everything she finds around her to record and relive feelings and memories of places and emotions. She collages, paints, draws, photographs. Francesca loves mixing modern technology, such as mobile phone apps, with the simplest of tools such as glitter glue, crayons and other children’s art supplies. Read her blog at http://franjournal.blogspot.com/
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Great tips! Please keep them coming!
I should imagine that if you don’t use up all your gesso at once, you could put a layer of cling wrap on the surface to prevent the air getting to it before putting the lid back on. It works well for cans of acrylic house paint and prevents a skin forming, even over a period of several months. You do have to make sure the cling wrap touches every little bit of the paint surface. Its certainly worth a try, and I use a similar method with PVA glue and silicon sealant to ensure an airtight seal. It even works with Liquid Nails.
cool look at http://www.schimmelart.com for the best use of junk mail in art.
Thanks for the comments and advice. Fantastic link too. I’ll try that technique!
Mix the paint with baby powder (possibly unscented!) and pva. I use the insides of security envelopes with some stamping dyes to color over the background. It leaves it in the colors I want for background, and the patterns are all so different. I recently had one arrive that looks like wood grain, have to try that with sienna.
Q: Mix the paint with baby powder (possibly unscented!) and pva. In this formula what is the pva? Is it polyvinyl alcohol? or polyvinyl acetate? Thanks
I look forward to making a piece..thank you everyone for the ideas.
sorry for the late reply, pva as in white glue
How much PVA to how much baby powder and acrylic paint? This sounds like an excellent tip!!!! I have to try this out ,as gesso can be expensive. Love your post and please keep them coming, keeps my juices flowing!!!!!