Friday, 27 July 2012
The seed of an idea
We have spent the past few days considering the incremental digital 'decimation' of a scanned tulip bulb for the artist Gordon Cheung. In no more than five devolutionary stages the bulb moves from a high resolution 3D recording (constructed of 381,774 triangles) to a simplified and singular pyramid structure. The specific tulip bulb that was recorded for the series is a Rothchild bulb that was selected by the artist whilst visiting Amsterdam earlier this year. The artist explains that the bulb is named after one of the most powerful banking family dynasties in history and therefore a principle player in spreading Capitalism globally. More to follow in the coming weeks.....
Monday, 23 July 2012
A room with a review
The following review of the Just Press Print exhibition at the Northern Print Gallery is by Sara Ogilvie, an artist, illustrator and Senior Lecturer in Imagemaking within Graphic Design, Northumbria University in Newcastle, UK.
Most often an exhibition consists of marveling
at polished final outcomes. Just Press Print, curated by Dr Paul Laidler
from The
Centre for Fine Print Research (CFPR) at University of the West of England, is
an invitation to explore beyond this and get under the skin of the print
process in its many forms.
CFPR is renowned for its cutting edge
print facilities so it is no surprise to see an eclectic range of published
prints on display. These recent prints have evolved from CFPR collaborations
with a carefully selected group of artists. From mind bending vectors of
flaming ice creams to 3D polymer Lichtenstein-esque knuckledusters each project
vies for your attention to uncover how it came to be.
Layers of paper sketches, notes and
test proofs bundled in bulldog clips hang informally from the walls. Rifle
through these pages and you can share in the artist and printer exchange;
eavesdrop on dialogue, decision-making and the ups and downs of the creative
process that unfurls. It is this factor that pulls the diversity of artists
together in this show and hooks the viewer into the work.
Designer Sebastian Schramm’s brief
email asking, ‘Don’t you want to sell my prints?’ is a forthright invite which
lead to a long distance collaboration between Schramm in Germany and Paul
Laidler in the UK. The exchange is at times rapid fire, bouncing feedback on
scale and colour, correcting digital photographic images of porcelain figurines
augmented with unexpected head balloons in an exploration or alienation and
individual behavior. The final edition of large saturated inkjets is vivid, striking
and unsettling in equal measure.
Like Schramm each exhibiting artist opens
the doors to their process and it is this welcoming, inclusive quality that is so
refreshing. In Paul Coldwell’s accompanying visual chronicle we see more of the
artist in the throws of the project. Scrawled sketchbook pages, noting the
music playing in the studio and a packet of Trebor mints stray into shot. With
a jaunty thumbs up over the printing press the atmosphere suggests a more easy
going tempo in comparison to Schramm’s.
Coldwell’s outcome, ‘Lines and Branches’, shows two relief prints taken from laser cut MDF, which are also on
display, depicting treetops coarsely treated with exaggerated halftone dots. Small
personal artifacts are depicted such as letters, kirby grips and combs, items that
keep strands together, separate or suggest lines of correspondence all related
to family trees.
There are some fine examples of 3D
printing on display. Katie Davies and Peter Walters have created ’Vela’ (2011)
an elegant ghostlike form sitting quietly on its shelf. Inspired by remote
constellations it is a transformation of audio data from a pulsar star into a
3D rapid prototype. In contrast to this is Brendan Reid’s Manta Ray, a 3D technicolour
prototype with a rhythm of rainbow stripes shouting for attention.
Other intriguing colour concepts of
note are Arthur Buxton’s obsessive digital data visualisations of British Vogue covers from 1981-2011. Like scrambled TV test cards predominant and common
colours come to the fore in ordered bars. The results show that trend colour preferences
have lightened in tone over the last 30 years.
This show undoubtedly displays the
forward thinking ethos of CFPR in relation to digital technologies however it
is encouraging to see everything in the mix; traditional, digital and 3D
technologies are interwoven here.
It successfully spotlights
how specialist guidance and liaison can help artists discover and ‘make’ in new
ways, leading to unexpected print territories and possibilities. In his PhD
curator, artist and CFPR printer Paul Laidler has explored whether the role of
Master printer is still relevant in todays technological democratisation. This
exhibition firmly suggests it is.
Friday, 13 July 2012
Mark's musings
UWE MA Printmaking student Mark Curtis Hughes has recently been assisting CFPR Editions with the printing of Paul Coldwell's laser cut and relief print edition entitled Lines and Branches. As part of the invitation to contribute to the project Mark was encouraged to reflect upon the process in relation to his own printmaking practice. In the proceeding text Mark discusses the differing approaches and considerations when printing in relief.
In my own first blog posting I mused with some open-ended questions about the importance of planning
and preparation in the printmaking process. Over the past two months I’ve been
working on two very different projects, one of my own and one through CFPR at
UWE.
With CFPR, I’ve been helping
edition a woodcut series for the artist Paul Coldwell. The blocks were made of MDF and
lazercut. At the moment I’m doing test strips for white ink on black paper-
we’ve already printed an edition black on white. The prints have just one
layer, although for future editions colour will be added. The print I’m doing
for myself is called “there she goes my beautiful world.” It’s also a woodcut,
but I’m printing it as a reduction. So there will only be one edition. My aim
for the print was to approach it in a painterly way- by improvising each layer
as I came to it.
With the Coldwell print, we
naturally made no contribution to the image, and CFPR and my involvement was
purely technical. ‘We needed a perfect edition. What’s the best way of
accomplishing this?’ So our approach was through lots of tests, proofs and
concise documentation. There are all sorts of variables when making a run- ink
consistence, rolling consistency, registration, packing and mess management- to
name a few. Printing on the Columbian press we have at UWE we spent a lot of
time fiddling with our packing set up. I was surprised how much the pressure
varies between a test strip and a full print.
Something else I had to
become familiar with was the block. I’d never printed a lazercut block before
so I was interested to see how it might print differently. MDF itself prints
similarly to lino; you get a sharper cut and less texture than with a regular piece
of wood. This, with the precision of the lazer mean that the image we were
printing was very fine and flat and required a smooth even layer of ink over
the whole surface. An early problem we had was that the block itself was too
thin, so when I rolled on the ink the board bent resulting in a sharp
rectangular faded area on the print.
The wood I’m using is from a
reclamation centre in Bristol. It’s a kind of hard wood, rich in colour, fine
grain and easy to cut. It’s also got dents, cracks and holes all over it, which
I incorporated into my design. It also has an impact of the layer of ink. I
feel things like that gives the print and the block more personality.
Unlike, the Coldwell print
I’ve been hand burnishing my woodblock. I use an assortment of spoons for
different pressures and surface areas. This means I don’t need to worry about
packing, however I do put newsprint over the paper to keep the back clean while
I’m working. I think that hand printing gives you a texture you can’t achieve
on the press; it also gives you more flexibility. But it is more labour
intensive, even compared to the Columbian.
One similarity between the
projects is registration. For the Coldwell prints it’s simply a means of
ensuring uniformity through the edition. For mine it’s necessary to make sure
all the layers line up. I’m allowing myself to be fairly flexible in my
edition, allowing the layers of colour to flow and interact in an open playful
kind of way. I don’t mind if there is some variation, as long as it’s contained
with the boarder.
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