Reflection
on the past week, 23rd May 2017
Pressing on
with printmaking and Frances Morris talk
Developing the drypoint
I’ve developed my
drypoint following the circles I etched with the dividers last week. As well as
the dividers, I'd bought a circle stencil which proved ideal for drawing the
circular shapes both on paper and ultimately on the plate. I sketched out a
series of shapes from the mini-dérive, working to relate the shapes to each
other and to balance the sketch with a variety of shapes and sizes. I also experimented
with textures and shading, and was quite pleased with the result. I then
flip-photocopied it and drypoint etched it into Perspex. As always I found curved shapes difficult to
draw - seems the trick is to move the plate rather than the needle. The idea of this is to form an underneath
layer of a two or three layer drypoint of the walk. It gave a reasonable result
but I will probably work further into it to try to get a bit more variation in
depth, following on from last week’s results. I printed it in blue (process
cyan) as I wanted to take one of the colours of the walk, namely that of the
railings outside the former Burley Library.
The shapes of the overlooked urban environment |
Yesterday I went
out at lunchtime and did a couple of very quick sketches which might act as a “top
layer” to this plate. I’d drawn outdoors previously but taken quite a bit of
time over each sketch. These were done quickly, and I was amazed at the amount
of visual information you can get down within 5 minutes.
Houses; visual note |
More soft ground troubles.
Following on from
last week's experiment, I tried again with pressing plant materials into a soft
ground. Last week I used an old plate that I'd acquired and stripped back. This
week I used a similar plate plus a brand new one. I sanded them both back
equally and cleaned them to within an inch of their life following my hunch of
last week. However... still no joy. The ground still came away. So it isn't the
plate, given I’d used an old and a new one, and it can’t be the cleaning
either. It must be something to do with the preparation and/or the etching. More
investigations needed.
“Troubling Time” conference paper
I've started to
write the paper for the "Troubling Time" conference in Manchester on
1st June. I am going to introduce my research and my practice, then invite the
participants to produce a visual work which "troubles time". This is
based on the organisers' encouragement of contributions which “engage
practically with their duration, with the aim of fostering methodological
diversity”. I don’t know if people will engage with it, and it’s already
pushing me out of my comfort zone, but that’s probably a good thing.
On a related note,
I've just heard that the walking event scheduled for 1st June has been
postponed for a couple of reasons. This is a shame but it does mean that I will
be able to attend the whole day at the conference which will be good.
Frances Morris talk
Finally I went to
an excellent talk by Frances Morris, director of Tate Modern, last night. She
is a very engaging, interesting speaker and I learnt a lot about "behind
the scenes at museums" from her Talk. I've summarised the points most
salient to my own practice in this blogpage.
How perplexing about the etching plate, Ann. It wouldn't be so bad if it weren't such an arduous process. Good luck with it. X
ReplyDeleteThank you, Bella, and apologies for my tardy reply. I am continuing to work on it!
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