A Full Five Days of Learning Printmaking Techniques

Australia Ghost Gum Monotype with watercolored ghost print
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This past week I was being a student of printmaking taught by Mary Quinnan Whittle. Her delicate copper plate etchings are lovely and this was the first chance our schedules coincided. The monotypes above I learned how to make on the first afternoon of class. The 5″ x 7″ plexiglass plate was covered with a thin layer of oil based sepia ink and then I pulled off the ink that was not relative to the image I wanted. What I wanted was a print of a ghost gum, a ghost gum inspired by a photo I took in Alice Springs, NT many years ago. I loved this and used the ink left on the plate to create a ghost print that could be watercolored. There is something about an image appearing out of nothingness that is very appealing. Like woodblock carving it is all about finding the light.

gelatin plate monotype with watercolor
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In the morning of the first day we learned how to make gelatin plates with the addition of glycerin. It was amazing how firm and long-lived these plates can be. I tried Mary’s suggestion of making a monotype using watercolors on the plate. I made this image three times because there was enough of the color left on the plate to see where to redo the image.  The effect of blurriness when the hand presses the paper into the squishy gelatin plate is interesting but not where I would like my prints to go. But great fun to teach students in the Experimentation with Materials class because now the gelatin plates will be so much easier for them to use with this new recipe.

Bamboo Solar Plate and Prints
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Day two was making solar plate prints. I had done this with Susan Baran in Australia a few years ago and was so intrigued with the results I got. But plates are expensive so I did not return to it. Mary’s class was a good time to take another look. The bamboo image was created by drawing with white gouache and a brush on a frosted glass plate. I put several layers of paint on but the solar transfer of the bamboo lacks clear edges and again a bit blurry for what I would like. Good experiment though.

Australian Ghost Gum dry point plate and prints
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On the third day I am back to the ghost gum and trying a dry point etching on a student grade etching plate that I purchased from Melbourne Etching Supply in Melbourne, Australia last spring. There is a limit to how many times a mylar plate that is dry pointed can go into the press. What holds the ink here is the burr created by scribing into the plate and when that burr is worn down the image will continue to get more blurry. But it is a quick and no acid needed technique. I think it also lends itself to being tinted with color, just because of that softness that occurs in the fifth print onward.

Australia Ghost Gum on tiny plate with prints
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The afternoon of the third day I am still working with the photo and earlier monotype print of the ghost gum. Now it is my first copper plate etching that I carve the image into. The plate is only about one by one and one half inches. This was fun and Mary was smart to only have us start with such a small copper plate just to get something that could see completion. I am also staying with the sepia oil based ink. I can now print several of these on my own press.

Woods scene plate test images with watercolor
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On day four I took a photo with my iphone into the woods near the studio. Mary let me have a four by five inch copper plate to see if I could get the feeling of being there onto the plate. It took three times into the etching bath to get the image I wanted. Mary kindly left a book of Rembrandt’s etchings on my work table so I had the best of inspiration while working. Here is the plate, the final print and a ghost print that has been water colored with the subtle shades of fall. Some of this work spilled into the fifth morning. But there was still time to do another copper plate.

Australia Outback copper plates and prints
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You can see two plates here because the first one on the top was not covered properly with the resist and the etching appeared in places that could not be incorporated into this tiny image (1″ x 4″) of the Australian Outback with a small sheep in the shade of a tree. I had to carve a second plate and etch it in slow stages to get what I wanted. Below you can see the two plates.

Australia Outback plate do over
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The one on the bottom has mistakes in the etching and I eliminated one of the sheep in the second plate above. Time is becoming quite dear by now and I need to finish up.

Australia Outback plate and watercolored print
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This is a print that I water colored just before writing this blog entry. Anything I want to add to this will have to be done by dry point etching as I do not have access to an acid bath and do not want to get involved with that right now.

The class was everything I expected and more. Last night I slept a full ten and a half hours and I think that was partly due to the exhaustive clean up necessary in a class that was as open as Mary’s. I would have liked just the etching copper plate part for a full five days but took advantage of learning anything else she was tossing out there. It was a great chance to see how others choose to learn and participate. I hope to get another chance to work with Mary and two other enthusiastic students I met this week.

 

An Inspiring Place – Expectations and Reality

Arrowmont entrance
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I spent the last few days in what was called a Masters Weekend. Probably named so that we could work with instructors who were masters in their particular field of craft. I needed an “Arrowmont Fix” because it has been six years since I was there teaching and I just missed the place. There are so many good memories of my growth as an artist and I just wanted to dip into the well again.

I took one offered on surface texturing, in the wood studio. Here is the space and the instructors’ works – Dan Essig and Wyatt Severs.

wood studio
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wood gallery 2
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wood gallery 1
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Instructors work
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The Wood Studio is a visually inspiring place to work and the equipment available to the students is easy to access and use with just a quick lesson. Not until a week or so before the class did I realize that the focus would be on milk paint and how it is used to color wood. But aside from that was an introduction to wood burning and waxing. The wood turners in the class made color and texture changes to turned pieces and other students experimented on boards. I don’t work that much with wood so I took objects that I would more likely use in my own work and was very happy I did – otherwise I’d have a bunch of colored boards sitting in my studio this morning wondering what to do with them.

Milk Paint and Burning tool on nature
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Among the things I took to class were pieces of davey board, pods, leaves, cubes made of box board with small wooden beads inside, cigar boxes and brie cheese boxes. Here is some of the pieces that have been milk painted, sanded or wiped, then waxed and buffed. The brie boxes also have burned in designs to catch the paint.

Brie boxes
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Assessing the work
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Most of the time in the three days workshop was working on our own. Good for some of us who do not want too much interference when we get on a roll but not so good for those who wanted to learn more than putting milk paint and wax on wood – or how to make work like the instructors. For me it was about the tools. The sand blaster made work more textured and defined differences between summer and winter grain in the wood which was very good for texturing and gave me a great idea for doing wood block prints. The burning tool was so much quicker and better to use than my run of the mill one in the studio – of course much more expensive, but I know I will get this new one soon.

The milk paint was problematic as my brie boxes even though burned and textured with gesso below the paint, still looked like something Martha Stewart would serve her brie in. The colors of milk paint simply look too designer or worse make your work look like Dan Essigs books. But with a bit more sloppy approach in application and the magic of Kiwi shoe wax, they begin to have possibilities.

Once the cigar box was sand blasted I knew I could turn most of my pieces (especially those Martha brie boxes) into a game box. The gessoed cubes once painted and waxed were fun to hold and shake. The brie boxes would be one for each of the two players with spinner arrows mounted inside their lids. The box itself will hold yet to be designed labyrinth maps on a search for inner peace. Ten cards were made of heavy paper stock colored, of course, with matching  milk paints. These will also have designs and play an integral part in the game. There is also a wooden egg that spins on a metal rod to determine some fate to a player. And one of the most fun pieces in the box is one of those little flexible body forms for drawing. I think one of the goals in the game will be to position him into tai chi movements that balance. Of course the best part of the whole game will be that in the search for inner peace there will be all this tension of winning and gaining ground on an opponent.

It is going to be so much fun completing this game and then finding someone to play it with! Here are some of the parts fitted into the box with my certificate of ‘staying until the end of class without being asked to go somewhere else’.  Or at least that is what I call these bits of paper.

dding to the game box
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On a serious note about the weekend I would like to mention that I take this place very seriously. Arrowmont is where I met some of the most impressive artists over the years. It was here that I was sent to get college credits for my undergraduate degree and here where I came to do research in their library. Just looking at this sculpture outside the library and this fountain in the gallery makes the visitor aware that this place values craft, art and those who come here to share their knowledge and inspire others who come after.

Iconic Arrowmont
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gallery fountain close up
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Resource center
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On the panel discussion with all the instructors being guided through questions, I was very much disappointed. The focus seemed to be how to make a living at your craft, how to schedule your time and how much of the tedious paper work to turn over to someone hired to manage that for you. There was not any discussion about what drives the work other than marketing. It was too bad too, because Jo Stealey’s work is very much content driven.

Content was much more in discussion when I started going to Arrowmont in the early 90s. Now it is less about the art making and more about the craft, technique making – and of course making a living with your medium of choice. I was personally pining for the days of John Risseuew, Lillian Elliot, Pat Hickman and so many others who asked the question “Why?” “Why are you doing this?” “What are your intentions?” And as I recall, no one answered, “Because I can make a living doing this.” All we wanted and some of us still do is to bring an idea we are passionate about into a visual form and share it with others.

Thanks for staying with me if you got this far. I needed to get this down somewhere and here is just the place.

 

 

New Work – Probably Just a Start

foundry center lethe boat
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This is a new piece measuring 18″ long by 8″ high and 6″ deep. It is titled Voyage on the River Lethe.

As I age forgetfulness is something to prepare for and find fascinating … all about that memory thing. What was real, what was imagined, what was just put there to fill in the blanks. Anyway, much as I do not care for water, boats I find wonderful…especially those in dry dock. The River Lethe (both “es” pronounced as long “es”) is one of four rivers flowing to the River Styx and then on to Hades in Greek mythology. Those on the ferry traveling this river could drink the water and forget what they knew and therefore make the transition easier into their next stage of existence.

I think they boarded this boat and dropped their luggage in the first hold and then made their way down further into the underwater hold. Lethe also stands for concealment which is a subject I really like working with in my structures.

foundry center lethe boat detail
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And here they are all settled and ready to go somewhere. They just can’t remember where. Nor can they hold on to what they thought they would always remember.

Lethe passengers
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They have drunk the water. Much like the lovely person in this researched image of the Lethe River.

Lethe
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This is such rich territory for me to work with that as soon as I have more time, I will continue with the River Lethe and all it implies.

I made some forms to take to Arrowmont this week that I will learn how to apply different textures on their surfaces. Definitely the techniques that can evoke water and loss will be played with over and over on all the structures I am taking.

This particular piece was just entered into an exhibit for jurying. I will let you know how that works out and of course any new works on this theme.

A Surprisingly Lovely Outcome

Australia BookBox closed
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The last two days have been very exciting in the studio. A wonderful book and restoration artist, Gian Frontini, from Canada joined Holly Fouts from Asheville and myself here to guide us through making boxes that look like books made of leather with inlays and hand fashioned closures.

Gian Frontini in studio
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I had a small scrap of kangaroo hide that I bought in Brisbane many years ago and decided it would be just enough leather to cover a small chunky box. The size is 6″ x 4.5″ x 2.25″. I took apart a broken compass to harvest interesting brass parts for the inlay and the closure. It worked perfectly!

Australia BookBox side view
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And since the box was made of kangaroo hide and the theme was also travels, I decided to put all the collected bits of Nature that ended up in suitcases and the subject of not only sketchbook drawings but silver point drawings and egg tempera paintings as seen in the previous blog and again here.

wire
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two gum leaves
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shells
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pineapple pod
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gum pod stick
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feathers
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bones
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Most of these small pieces fit into the box that has been lined with a contact print that a student gave me on my last trip. The view finder of the navigation compass was a perfect size for the closure catching over a small brass cobblers nail. The inner part of the lid is another gift from a student that is a copy of an old Australian painting made for a calendar that was then rusted. It is a traveler along a road under Eucalyptus trees. Perfect! So here is the box opened to show the contents and the cap from my most favorite dark beer, Toohey’s Old.

Australia BookBox open
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Isn’t this the most wonderful treasure box!? Thank you Gian for not only the guidance but encouragement to do more. He ended by helping me turn one of my favorite scrapers into a leather paring knife. Both he and Holly made beautiful book/boxes as well. It was a great two days in the studio.