operations |
comment | "parent_author":"juliakponsford",<br>"parent_permlink":"re-reinhard-schmid-high-heels-rope-and-an-asparagus-a-surrealistic-approach-to-the-first-ascent-20171015t202352404z",<br>"author":"reinhard-schmid",<br>"permlink":"re-juliakponsford-re-reinhard-schmid-high-heels-rope-and-an-asparagus-a-surrealistic-approach-to-the-first-ascent-20171015t204604563z",<br>"title":"",<br>"body":"Traditional reverse glass painting is completely opaque and this is something I always tried to overcome. This piece here still is opaque,<br> the transparency you have while working on it gets lost when you finish the painting. Its meant to hang on a wall,<br> not in a window for instance... In my more recent works I was actually able to preserve some of that transparency. \"Journey I\" is an early example for that.\n\nThis piece [here (https:\/\/steemit.com\/art\/@reinhard-schmid\/tools-for-working-with-glass-1-the-hammer) is left completely \"open\" and you can see the wall through it.",<br>"json_metadata":" \"tags\":[\"art\" ,<br>\"links\":[\"https:\/\/steemit.com\/art\/@reinhard-schmid\/tools-for-working-with-glass-1-the-hammer\" ,<br>\"app\":\"steemit\/0.1\" " |
|