So, I am working on my MFA in Painting and have recently started up an "alchemy" series involving the 7 basic metals and their historic signs. It's a long story of how I got here, but tonight I witnessed something truly strange and am curious if anyone could explain the chemical reaction? The results were amazing, and easily duplicated.
On copper plates (industrial copper, probably a steel/copper mix to keep price lower, although on straight steel, this did not work), with a mixture of liver of sulphur and craft grade silica gel (flower preservative left around in my studio)in a ratio of roughly 2:1:
One brush mark hesitated for about a second and then turned instantly black. The marks that were made could not be scoured off, sanded down to underlying copper, yes. But one plate I laid leaves down and blotted around them and left it to sit for about 10 minutes. The areas of the leaves turned the copper hot pink, with definite white-blue lines clearly surrounding each leaf, as if the plate had been heated to extreme temperatures. But the plate never got even remotely warm to the touch.
Can anyone tell me why this happened? Because the effect is striking, like a Japanese Batik.
Jamin