relief print
You are currently browsing articles tagged relief print.
The Crow Show is a national exhibition produced by The Studio Door and curated by Roxana Velásquez Maruja Baldwin, Executive Director, The San Diego Museum of Art. This would be a marvelous exhibit to see in person, but, because it’s in San Diego, perusing the catalog is an enjoyable alternative. Click on the cover image for the link.
Among all of the remarkable artwork is this little print – the mistletoe crow continues to bide his time and I couldn’t be more pleased!
Tags: corvid, crow, linocut, mistletoe, printmaking, relief print, Viscum album
relief print by Betty Curtice Taylor
c. 1940 while at Central High School, Akron, Ohio
included in Thanks, Betty! at Summit Artspace, now in my collection
It is fairly certain that Betty’s inspiration was her father, a printer by trade. I am enamored with the details of this letterpress scene: the light, the platen, the rollers and the stack of paper.
Tags: letterpress, linocut, print shop, relief print
Just finished ‘Studio Bees’ for In the Pink at Hudson Fine Art & Framing and The Red Twig, Friday, October 6, 5 – 8 p.m. All proceeds benefit The Gathering Place in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.
Tags: acrylic, honeybee, mixed media, printmaking, relief print
At Summit Artspace the monthly artwalk is an indoor event, but in the Northside area artists have expanded into the urban outdoors. There are pop-up artists in the parking lot and, along the sidewalk, the Northside Street Gallery hosting a featured artist each month – my spot for August. The street installations should be somewhat impervious to the weather, so I needed to think beyond works on paper. For this project I wanted to combine several ideas and processes that I’ve been considering for months: carving a woodcut with the Dremel on the pear tree slice, printing on fabric using relief blocks along with the usual silk screen and, finally, giving the recently acquired serger an official test drive. The outcome is a series of pennants to be strung from trees and light poles. I’m happy with the results and am already considering similar projects and uses.
This serger originally belonged to Connie Bloom, a fiber artist and friend, who died last fall. I hope she’s not too judgmental on my skills.
Tags: printmaking, relief print, serger, silkscreen
Hemlock, Conium maculatum, and several of its nefarious relatives, are members of the Apiaceae (or Umbelliferae) family of plants, commonly called the parsley or carrot family. This is a large family of more than 3700 plants and deciding how to represent it in the As Potent as a Charm series has been a bit overwhelming at times. Inspiration arrived in a remark in a Peterson Field Guide, Easten/Central Medicinal Plants by Steven Foster and James A. Duke. In describing Golden Alexanders (also among the Apiaceaes), the author stated, “Amateurs fooling with plants in the parsley family are playing herbal roulette.” Aha! A wheel it is! This time the format will be circular, rather than the narrow rectangle of previous prints. A dozen sketches have been chosen, four of which are poisonous; further decisions are pending, but soon the fun will begin!
Tags: apiaceae, as potent as a charm, hemlock, linocut, linoleum block, poison, relief print, umbelliferae
A recent addition to the As Potent as a Charm series of poisonous botanicals, Suspects, is inspired by Castor Bean, Ricinus communis, with a nod to the 1978 ‘umbrella murder’ of Bulgarian dissident, Georgi Markov, in London. Neurotoxins found in the seeds are 500 times more poisonous than cyanide.
Tags: as potent as a charm, castor bean, Georgi Markov, linocut, linoleum block, poison, relief print, ricinus communis
Evolving Landscapes
Summit Artspace
March 3 – April 8, 2017
As noted in a past blog post, Landscape Perils, the yew is one of those “plantings that add a hint of danger to the structure of the garden.” In Pleasant Valley appearances deceive: the ubiquitous landscape/foundation plant of suburbia, the Yew, seems ordinary, but all parts of Taxus baccata are poisonous.
Pleasant Valley (detail)
Yew, Taxus baccata
relief print
Tags: as potent as a charm, linocut, relief print, summit artspace, Taxus baccata, yew