Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Going into hyperdrive...

So, I haven't done too much art lately... but that's about to change big time! Since last week I'm enrolled in two classes at San Jose State University (through open University): a painting class and a lithography class. Classes meet 2x a week and I plan to spend plenty of additional time working on projects at the school and create lots of work. This work might go into slightly different directions than my other stuff because some of it will be done for the classes, but that's good. It will teach me specific skills or will force me to work in ways I haven't worked before. Which again will improve my skills as an artist.

Here is a first example of a simple (?) exercise we did today: play with depth of field by creating a very simple abstract grid using ideally only value, for instance just raw umber and white. I found this a pretty interesting exercise because it teaches you about working with light, how to focus light on parts of your composition, how to guide the viewer's eye, how to work with depth and so forth. Here is the piece I came up with. I think it's actually quite interesting, but, obviously, I need to do this a few more times to really get the hang of it.

I'll continue posting things here every now and then to talk about interesting things we do in class. Of course I also work some on my other art projects, but progress on those might be a bit slower for a while. We'll see :)

Oh, and below are a few photos of the printing studio where I will spend a lot of time now. Obviously this is like a toy store for me! Look at all those presses!!! And that's just one of the rooms (this one has 4 intaglio presses, and 3 letter presses in it. There are also 5 Litho presses in the other room etc. etc.)

Sunday, January 21, 2007

A late happy new year and some woodcutting


This comes a bit late, of course, but here is a happy new year to all of you out there, anyway.

I didn't have much to blog about in the art world recently because I just didn't have much opportunity to make art. I did see a few great shows (Anselm Kiefer @ SFMOMA, the FineArt print fair at Ft. Mason center this weekend, just to mention two that jump to mind), but I just didn't have much opportunity to create new art. I dabbled with a few wood cuts, though. Mostly, these were experiments, and here is the result of one of them.

I consider this an experiment because typically I use really nice wood to cut on. Either shina, cherry, poplar or lauan wood (a type of mahogany that's great for woodmaking) - typically as veneer with a really smooth grain (except for the lauan which has a very coarse texture). Or linoleum, of course. Smooth, even, all you can wish for. But I know that some of the most interesting woodcuts really make use of imperfections in the wood, use gnarly (is that a word?), semi-weathered wood and just pieces of wood found. I actually collected candidate pieces for quite a while already, but never had the time to do something with them.

Also, I was worried that my nice lino-cutting and wood cutting knives could get damaged with coarse wood. That is, until another printmaker pointed out that this is nonsense, that's what the knives are made for ("just make sure you don't hit a hidden nail or such"). Oooookaaayy...

I did some more research and heard an interesting tip about working on weathered wood: when you rub the wood with linseed oil and let that dry it will take printing ink better, especially when it's slightly weathered wood. So that's what I did and it did work well.

The resulting print is on the left. It's not the most specacular print but it proved the point that you can make something interesting even with a piece of old board you found on a construction site. Now I feel almost like a German Expressionist (they also often worked on found wood, I hear). It is also the largest wood cut I've made so far (the board is about 20" x 5.5" which is much taller than all my earlier woodcuts. Note the super strong texture on the wood which originates from the weathered wood. I even sanded the board a bit to tone down the texture and it still was that strong! The main challenge, I found, is how inconsistent the hardness / softness of such weathered wood is. Some parts of the board cut like butter, and others like really old, hard linoleum. And you have to adjust to those differences as you cut - often within one line that is being cut. A bit of a challenge. But if it was easy it wouldn't be fun, right?

I have more experiments to talk about, but they have to wait for the next update.