This is a new solar plate etching and chine colle of a couple on their wedding day. It is inspired by a portrait I took digitally of them in the wine cellar bar area before making their reception debut. The picture was taken through the large gated door keyhole. The overall print is 14 x 9.5 and the etching itself is 4.5 x 3. I like the intimacy and the vintage quality of this print. It's something that you have to walk up to, and peer into to see what's going on. A small treasure of a moment.
Showing posts with label inks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inks. Show all posts
17.12.09
11.8.09
BELLYSIDE

Solar Plate Etching + Chine Colle :
Playing with variations of ink color and handmade japanese tissue paper.
LABELS
chine colle,
color,
inks,
print,
solar plate etching
BALANCE



This is another print that documents a specific occasion and moment(s) in time. In this case, it is a wedding celebration. It is an archival digital print on Hahnemuhle German Etching paper layered with two Solar Plate Etchings printed with bone black oil based ink. The color prints are photographs that were taken while driving over the bridge to St. Simon's Island in Georgia where the couple married. The Solar Plate Etching is inspired by photographic images of the couples first dance. The symbolism here is about the balance in a relationship : structure, support, and logic .vs. intuition, freedom and mystery.
Note: the two middle photographs are of the etched polymer plate.
LABELS
custom,
digital,
documentary,
etching,
inks,
paper,
Photography,
solar plate etching,
wedding
HAYSTACK RESIDENCY

I was super fortunate to receive a work-study full scholarship to Haystack Mountain School of Craft (on Deer Isle, ME) to participate in a Surface Design Workshop led by Fraser Taylor of SAIC. It was a wonderful experience to be surrounded by creative focused energy for 2 weeks without the distractions of everyday life. Amazing meals were prepared, studios open 24 hours a day, mossy walking trails along the ocean, library resources, a staff of all artists of different disciplines, slide shows and presentations, 70 students from all over the world ... all making for a rich experience of creative growth. I was definitely influenced by the natural surroundings when making my own work. Above is a collage of some of the experiments I worked on during my stay. The hand cut stencils that created the screenprint on muslin are reminiscent of barnacles, bones or sea life. These were screenprinted individually in variations of white. The prints on paper are "x-rays" of the sea life shapes, created by the pigment residue left on the screen. These prints were more spontaneous, not knowing what the output of the one swipe of the screen would be. I also experimented with discharge printing on fabric, using found moss to use as a stamp while making the screen. Since there was a press to be used in the Book Arts Studio, I printed a solar plate I made in NY, combining it with a process learned at Haystack called Dye Transfer, using sodium alginate to push the dyes through the screen. The experience was all about exploration and discovery. For more info about Haystack, visit www.haystack-mtn.org/
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