Hi there,
I'd like to enquire about the permanency of wrinkled pain films. I understand this is considered a technical flaw arising from the proportion of binder to pigment, or a heavy application of paint made up with a polymerised oil, or the heavy application of siccative pigments (ie. cobalt and manganese colours which are surface driers) whereby the surface of the paint film forms a skin stifling the oxidization of the underlying paint and therefore causing the skin to shift with movement of the underlying paint. I figure that once the wrinkled film has dried through, there would be no further technical issues aside from the eventual yellowing of the oil (which would obviously be quite severe due to the amount of oil). Am I correct to assume this, or will there be further adverse changes to paint film within my life time, say the next 70 years. You would be right to assume my intention is to cause the paint film to wrinkle for a certain effect.
I would also like to ask for your thoughts about the addition of large amounts of fumed silica to polymerized oils, ie. epoxide, stand or long oil alkyd mediums and combinations thereof, made up on the slab. To this I have added very small amounts of synthetic lakes, ie. pthalo green, to colour the gel-like silicon/alkyd-oil mixture which I have then thinned slightly with Mineral Spirits and poured onto the surface of lead primed linen canvas (lying horizontally). It is a very beautiful effect, however I do have my reserves about how sound this will be; I do not desire the work last a million years though preferably both mine and the buyer’s life time. I figure the silicon will trap the binder and prevent it from shifting too much as it dries. I just wonder if this is too fine a pigment (if it is considered a pigment at all) to create a strong paint film.
Any thoughts would be welcomed. And, yes, in case there was any confusion, I am an abstract painter. Your advice will be appreciated as always.
Thank you and best wishes,
Daniel



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