Showing posts with label experiment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label experiment. Show all posts

23.4.12

PROCESS SHOTS


Right now I'm in the middle of working on a few projects that are not in the printing phase, but I had a strong desire to physically print - to make marks on paper with a bold ink by way of screenprinting.
So, I did.
I used up some scrap pieces of nice paper and used a screen I had already made (for the tote bags I sell) and made some cards. Here are some process shots for the fun of it!

21.1.12

WORK IN PROGRESS



*It's been a while since I have posted any work, but I've definitely been producing. I will take the next few weeks to post projects I've done in the past year and earlier.

The images above are of a work in progress at the printshop. I've been layering circular images onto a beautiful soft black Hahnemuhle paper that is 33x41" in size. All of the circles have been screen-printed onto the paper in variations of white, gray and silver. All of the imagery was hand painted or drawn on film to create the screens for printing. I will continue layering and playing with different ink opacities. Look out for my post of the finished piece!

27.9.09

PUBLIC ART PROJECT






ART / Vanishing JOBS

LOCATION

This project took place in an old industrial area in Brooklyn. The neighborhood was given the acronym DUMBO in 1978 (Down Under the Manhattan Bridge Overpass), thinking that the unattractive name would deter developers (thank you Wikipedia). It became a booming artist's community in the late 1970's and by the end of the 20th century, as property became more expensive in Manhattan, DUMBO became increasingly gentrified. It now has an interesting dynamic of artist's spaces and luxury residential condos.

PROJECT

The project is made up of 50 unique "ghost prints" that each represent one of the 50 states in the USA, with up to date statistics of that state's unemployment rate printed at the bottom. The image is of the Employment Guide newspaper containers found all over New York City.

The found "gallery wall" was a garage door of a local lighting business. The prints were hung in a grid using powerful magnets.

The prints are hand silkscreened on Stonehenge 100% cotton paper and are 15x22. I hand stamped the data (states and numbers) during the course of the day while engaging in dialogue with passerby's.

As an artist, who is currently on the unemployment list, I have created this project (this JOB) for myself. Proactive waiting.

Ideally I'd love to reinstall this piece in a public window or gallery space. Suggestions welcome.