Reflection on the past
week, 31st July 2017
Printmaking
I spent Thursday
in the print room – sad to think it will be one of my final sessions in there.
I printed the final stage of the Royal Park aquatint. It needed a little bit
more definition in the foreground, just to pull the foreground forward a bit
more, so I drypointed some more vegetation into it, on the basis that both the
plate and my patience were wearing thin after the repeated etchings. I also
brasso’ed the sky and it printed quite nicely. The drypoint gave a much
lighter, fuzzier mark than the etching and this has set me off with the idea of
a drypoint into metal, but that will be post-MA.
Aquatint plate - final state |
I don’t think I
mentioned that I had been trying out different papers – I tried Fabriano Unica
white, Canaletto, which is a creamy colour and Somerset velvet white. I think I
got the best prints on the Somerset paper, but all the papers worked well, and
I would use them all again. In particular, the Canaletto is fine for everyday work.
Having made detailed notes on soaking times etc, the trick with the Somerset
seems to be to give it a really good blotting. There is much more at play here,
such as press pressure and the type of blankets, on the press, but there’s
little point in further experimentation as I’ll be leaving this print facility
soon. I am hoping to move my printing practice to Leeds Print Workshop from
September. At this point I will experiment to try to get a stable process as
hopefully I will be there for a while.
I produced three prints
of the plate at each stage and on each paper, and currently I am flattening them
in batches under boards at home – I need my floor space back
As I mentioned
last week, I will submit these prints a series, a metaphor for the MA journey. However,
the journey doesn’t end there, so at some point I will need to do something
that demonstrates this. I would like to somehow creatively destroy the plate
but I don’t think I will get time to do it this side of the MA deadline.
Scarborough!
On Thursday I also
tried brasso on the little Scarborough plate and printed that, too – the polishing
seemed to help. I’ve also heard that my prints of this were accepted at Woodend
Gallery in Scarborough for their Summer postcard show. So a trip to Scarborough
is on the cards post MA, as if an excuse were needed!
Writing up
Most of the time
since my last blogpost has been spent writing up. I’ve finally finished the
deep reflection on the “Troubling Time” conference and I comb-bound it today.
This should form a great resource for ideas and new research possibilities post-MA.
A different kind of map; how my practice has worked out this year |
For my creative
journal, I identified 10 themes, all interrelated, with a view to writing a
holistic reflection on each theme. I’m finding it really interesting to look
back over the whole module. I’m identifying lots of new possibilities and am generating
lists of future ideas. Some of these were already in my mind; others have
appeared as I’ve been writing. Again, this should form a resource for to
kick-start what comes post-MA, whatever that may be. It’s also raising the
question of how I will write things up once course is over. I think it will
probably be in a workshop notebook plus annotated examples of print experiments
taped into sketchbooks. It seems important to keep notes of processes to act as
a reference.
I have to say that
the writing up seems endless. I’ve written up 6 themes, with extensive
reflection, but Etching is the next theme – wish me luck! As so often, I am
reminded of my panel at Troubling Time. Bob discussed the idea of artists in
their bunkers, and Jo discussed the idea of slow periods followed by periods of
frantic activity. The current phase is definitely in the latter category.