Showing posts with label paper. Show all posts
Showing posts with label paper. Show all posts

Monday, 27 March 2017

MA Week 62 - Etching, processes, crit… and London


Reflection on the past week, 27th March 2017

 
Printing and processes

Following on from last week’s blogpost, I updated my overall plan but decided I needed more tactical, day by day plans, to allow me to focus and get something done. I decided that I should work around being able to get into the Print Room on Friday. I wanted to restart etching but felt unsure about how to do so.

It’s amazing what a bit of thinking time can do. A few strands came together, somehow. A couple of weeks back I had a discussion with one of my fellow students about how my health difficulties impact on my ability to produce work. I seem to have intense phases of activity followed by days or weeks of inability to do anything, even blog. She said, “that’s your practice. Work with it”. This quite obvious piece of information came as both a revelation and a relief. Within creative practice there always seems to be a driver to do work on a grand scale. Realising that smaller pieces of work can also be valid suddenly opened up new ways of working.

Allied with this, I’d been reading and pondering upon a newspaper that I’d received at the MMU conference. The illustrated paper is by Howard Read, whom I’d met and talked with briefly, and it describes his visual and academic research into the gentrification of Elephant and Castle in London. The subject material was of obvious interest to me. Alongside considerations of the removal of social housing and the creeping gentrification, Howard had discussed in detail the purpose of sketching and drawing. Again, a real insight: not all drawings have to be finalised. Indeed many drawings should not be finalised as they are a contribution to a future, finalised piece. A sketch can be just that – a visual note, so to speak.

Original photo....
These two strands manifested themselves in a realisation that I didn’t need to rush anything; I could work on a smaller scale with a more robust process. I therefore got an A5 sketchbook and did a (reversed) sketch of one of the Mabgate photos. It isn’t perfect, but it is allowed to be like that. I also moved some things around in the composition to suit my purpose. I let myself enjoy the sketching rather than pressurising myself and it worked so much better. The following evening, I found the little copper plates that hadn’t worked in the Summer, and found I’d re-ground them. I freehand-etched the same image into one of them.

 
Etching based on photo

I hadn’t been in the print room for so long that I felt slightly nervous returning. By happy coincidence, Mike (the technician) had been doing some etching so had up-to-date experience of how long to bite the plates. I bit it for 29 minutes, inked it, printed it and… it worked! 7 x 4.5cm of wonderful scratchy black marks. I spent the rest of the session working with different papers (Canaletto and Zerkel) and different levels of polishing, to get used to using the copper. The plate’s previous biting (from the Summer) has left it pitted and this gives an interesting undertone, so this is possibly something to do more deliberately as I move on. I also sanded and inked another of the little plates from the Summer ready for the next piece.

 
Crit

The same day, five of us got together for a crit. I’d brought in the paintings I did for the MMU conference plus the Mabgate office print (see this week 51 blogpost) , but by this time I’d printed the little plate and had become quite immersed in that. Ignoring this, my classmates gave me plenty of input!
Details of "tiles" from work for MMU conference
 
Again, as at the conference, there was interest in the “tiles”. There was a suggestion to introduce colour into the tiles, or to try strips. They suggested using photocopies and copies onto acetate to help composition. Another wake-up call around process. I know this – so why haven’t I been doing it? It’s been the time pressure that I’ve put myself under, of course. There was a feeling that the map elements might be too literal an interpretation of the journey, and it was suggested I consider cropping some of the work – effectively using a little square viewfinder to find points of interest. This tied in with ideas I’d had to do a few smaller pieces – paintings, prints, drawings, photos –based on the Mabgate photographs. A really interesting idea was to take a “slice” of work – why does everything have to be square, or rectangular.  

I particularly like the idea of basing something on the “tiles” but using colour and using strips so this is a probable area for experimentation.


London

The next day, the same five of us went to London. I’ve written reflections about the galleries we visited in this London Galleries page. However, there is something more to relate. We were all feeling pretty tired at about 4.30pm outside our last gallery, the Drawing Room, and after some discussion set off to walk to Elephant & Castle tube station to get the tube back to King’s Cross. We hadn’t go far when by chance we saw a bus going to King’s Cross so we boarded. This meant a top-deck view of Elephant & Castle, including the very development that Howard Read had been recording. I’ve never been to Elephant & Castle before in my life. It was such a heavy coincidence that it intuitively confirmed to me that my approach of the past week was the correct direction at this point.

 
Visiting galleries is thirsty work

Wednesday, 19 October 2016

MA Week 43 - Printing, partying, networking and writing


Reflection on the week - 18th October 2016
 
Printing

I finally got into the Print Room on Thursday 13th October and finished the pylon drypoint. It lacks symmetry, or better said mirror imagery, but I don’t think that is too much of a problem because it is hand cut. I did have some trouble printing it, though. I couldn’t get a good black line out of it. I think the grooves I’ve etched may not be deep enough. It will hardly take any wiping at all. I need to talk to Mike or Mick about it but I didn’t get that far.  

I did do a bit of experimentation with paper for the first time. Mick had kindly given me some offcuts of Canaletto paper which is about 300gsm, so really it’s like thin card. I soaked it for about 20 minutes but I think perhaps I should have soaked it longer. It did seem to take the print a bit better than the cartridge paper, though. Certainly more experimentation to do but that would be no hardship!

 
View inside pylon - 1

I also printed it onto a couple of monoprints, one of which had tissue paper on. As I suspected, some of the tissue soaked off when I gave the paper a quick soak. I think I could probably glue it back on so I will have to see to that in due course. I also printed onto a two-tone scratched monoprint and I liked this one. I haven’t had time to reflect fully on these and where next but I don’t see that as a problem; the dissertation has to take priority this term and the printing will kick back in as the priority from January. Any printing I can do this term is a bonus.
View inside Pylon - 2 - drypoint over monoprint
 

Leeds Print Workshop opening
 
On Friday I went to the opening party of the Leeds Print Workshop and it was grand. It was kind of like hanging out in a printerly environment with beer. What more could a body want?

I also had lots of good conversations, including with my classmates Carol and Sue. Then I met two of the first year MA students, Will and Russell. Russell’s work seems to have some overlaps with mine so we have agreed we will get together to discuss in more detail and see if there are any avenues for collaboration. It was interesting trying to answer Will and Russell’s questions about the course; they are very similar to the ones I was grappling this time last year and they reflected back to me that fact that I have learnt something.I caught up with College printroom staff past and present which was good, especially to see Lyndon, and was also delighted to see my friend Filippa up and about after a bit of a low time.

Alongside the Print Workshop opening was an exhibition called “Out of Bounds”, which carried on from residencies that various East Street Arts artists and associates had undertaken in the Summer of 2015. I visited East Street Arts’ Patrick Studios to see some of the outcomes of the residencies in September 2015, and was particularly inspired by the urban mark-making of the ceramicist Rebecca Appleby. Rebecca was exhibiting two pieces from her Urban Palimpsest series and I had the good fortune to be able to chat with her again. She has had a fantastic year, including winning “Best Newcomer” at the prestigious Ceramic Art London. She gave me a bit more of an insight into how she is drawn to the urban as her source material, and also advised me to keep working and striving so that I could be ready for things to start happening when the time is right. It was a real boost to be able to talk to her a year on.

Thinking ahead
 
Another thing I’ve been doing over the past few weeks is working with my classmates Sue, Carol and Paula, to try to find a venue for our end-of-year show this time next year. To be honest I have done the least work of the four of us. However, it has opened up a conversation with East Street Arts about using temporary space. I would love to exhibit in the space that Out of Bounds is currently occupying. Carol told me the same thing as Rebecca – get making!

Thinking

I’ve had plenty of thinking to do as I press on with my dissertation. I’ve written a couple of short critical analyses. One concerns Tina Richardson’s chapter A Wander through the scene of British Urban Walking in the book she edited, Walking Inside Out : Contemporary British Psychogeography.  Her chapter throws up some interesting links with nostalgia and therefore heritage.

I’ve also written something about Constructing ‘The North’ : space and a sense of place, a book chapter by Stuart Rawnsley. in Northern Identities : historical interpretations of ‘The North’ and ‘Northernness’. Rawnsley offers a potted history of the construction of Northernness. His approach is quite aggressive in terms of exposing agencies that he considers to control constructions of “the North”. I agree with some of it, but I found it went much further than my own viewpoint.

Finally I have been browsing Discourse and Identity by Bethan Benwell and Elizabeth Stokoe. This has given me a really useful overview of factors at play in the construction of identity. These authors argue that identity is fluid and will change depending on the individual’s situation. The negative point for me with this book was that it seems to stray into the idea of the individual being part of a kind of mass of people who can’t think for themselves – I’ve found this in a number of what I would call “Social Sciences” texts. However it did throw up links to identity being linked to relationships and with place. So a kind of web of heritage – identity – walking is beginning to emerge.

A quick psychogeography and culture lesson

I was really pleased to be able to meet up with Dr Zoë Tew-Thompson of Leeds Beckett University on Tuesday. Zoë is taking part in the “Being Human” event that I mentioned last week. She is a lecturer in Media, Communication and Cultures and has a particular interest in place and space. Her research has included telling the “small stories” behind the “big shiny” official stories (my words) – much like I am trying to do. Also similar to me, she had to pull theories from many different disciplines to be able to understand her research and it was great to know that I’m not going mad trying to find the academic underpinnings of my visual work. She gave me a few more psychogeography references to follow up and we talked in some depth about the importance of viewing the city in a different way to that which the city planners have defined. The shapes, smells, colours are all there to be observed if you simply open yourself to them. Zoë is interested in the idea of disrupting the “official history” to tell the narratives of the individual stories underneath, because really these are not only the story of one person – they are the stories of many contingent people.  In this she articulated at least some facet of why I’m doing what I’m doing. It was quite exhilarating to be able to talk to someone who knew what I was on about and could offer insights that unlocked some of the academic blockages I’ve been wrestling with. As a result of our meeting, though not of any particular thing that Zoë mentioned or suggested, I’ve realised I can improve the structure of my dissertation so that it will flow significantly better.