Reflection
on the past week, 6th December 2016
Urban printing
Something visual
at last, after what feels like years but really is “only” about six weeks of
writing. I went to a “Printmaker’s Toolkit” one-hour session by Cath Brookes at
the West Yorkshire Print workshop, entitled “Printmaking in the Urban
Landscape” – so obviously right up my street.
Cath is inspired
by the industrial and has done a lot of work around Redcar, around the chemical
plants and the now-closed steelworks (see Cath’s website).
She sketches outdoors and then works from the sketches. She brought one of her
sketchbooks and there were some lovely thick black lines in there (possibly
conte sticks?). She demonstrated the printing of a thin acetate plate which she’d etched
previously, first inking it in black then selectively wiping it, rolling ink
back onto it, and re-wiping it. This gave a very industrial feel to the
outcome.
Cath with the first print |
Cath managed to
gallop through all of this in an hour, but I took nearly all of it in as I have
spent the past year working with the same techniques and subject matter. There
were two really interesting points. Firstly, the use of thin, transparent
plates. These allow you to trace an image using a Sharpie marker prior to
etching it, and they also assist with the selective inking of the monoprint stage.
Secondly, Cath is working the opposite way round to the way I did it, as I’d
done the monoprint layer first. I’ve bought some of the transparent acetate
with a view to having a go with Cath’s technique as soon as possible.
The dissertation is done
The dissertation
is now finished, printed and in for binding. I’ve also finally managed to
publish a few notes about Ann-Marie Bathmaker’s seminal book chapter on Life
Histories. The dissertation took some beating into submission over the past weekend.
Thursday went well; I took Sharon’s advice of last week (see my week 49 blogpost) and restructured the discussion about the chosen artists along the
lines she’d suggested. This seemed to open up the essay and somehow remove
other blockages. It was a long but successful day. On Friday I went into
College and sorted out all the images, which took about 5 hours, then came home
for an evening shift tidying up the bibliography and various other loose ends.
So far so good. Saturday and Sunday were not so good. I knew I had to cut it
off and tidy it up, but I was tired and I’ve read and written the damned thing
so many times that I could recite it off by heart so I’ve no idea if what I’m
reading is on the screen or in some previous version. The conclusion, in
particular, proved much more difficult to write than I expected. I can only go
back to the fact that this is my first piece of writing of this style.
Anyway, what’s
done is done, all 130 hours of it. It has been a steep learning curve,
frustrating at times, but for the most part enjoyable. I feel I have risen to
the academic challenge and could have written more with more words and more time.
I’m going to keep some of the psychogeography books out of the Library over
Christmas in the hope of being able to read a bit of them. However my desire to
do something visual has been absolutely fuelled by this morning’s demo.
Although I haven’t given much thought to what I’ll do for the Final Project, I
know it will have industrial-style black lines in it. Watch this space.
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