Saturday, 1 December 2012

Week Nine - Bathroom Crack

I want to continue investigating my environment, linking my professional background as an architect, and my personal life within a nuclear family so that the theme of my work is centred around my domestic space, with a narrative about the inevitable timeline of decay. Using the collapse of a building through time and use; worn out carpet, cracks in walls, disorder in the bathroom and kitchen, the work could become a metaphor for life, ageing and relationships in a shared space.  

I was interested in Rachel Whiteread's laser cut ply inspired by glasses and bottle marks left on a table, which gave me the confidence to paint the essence of the Frottage on lino, rather than reproduce it exactly, as I had done on the metal plate previously. I want to continue to investigate and develop the technical side of the process I have devised,  to see where it leads to, but also  I want to combine the ideas of process and manual labour  - direct mark making from direct use of tools - pouring, scraping, mimicking yet transforming textures and  marks from the rubbings. It is this engagement with the specificity of the material which becomes the link between architecture as the theme of the work, and process - in both there is  relationship between person, tools and real material. 

I'm using my rubbings of the bathroom crack - here is the photo of it:
The frottage repeated the crack ie several rubbings of it side by side with the bathroom door lock added:
In a way the "essence" of the crack was transferred to two lino block using Brunswick Black poured and scraped and dripped through stencils. The stencil almost behaved like a crack through which the Brunswick Black could seep. One of the floor rubbings was also "mimicked".
The blocks were allowed to dry as before, then etched with caustic soda (this time 2 tbsp wall paper flakes per 200ml water. 1.5 tbsp caustic soda. Left for 30 mins.)
Bathroom Crack: Brunswick Black applied through stencils

Hall Floor about to be caustic soda etched

Hall Floor Further with etched block
Below is the printed lino block of the hall floor. Experience of the process has told me that the resultant ink was not as thick as in previous lino blocks and therefore would not transfer to the metal plate. There would not be enough density of ink to be acid resist, so would not produce a printable plate. I decided not to pursue the etching onto metal of this block, although I may well use it elsewhere.
The following two lino blocks were variations of "Bathroom Crack" which were printed onto paper and offset onto the prepared zinc plate, as previously described. These were then aquatinted, etched and printed. I would have preferred there to be more ink to resist the acid, with less white grinning through, but I decided to go with them anyway. 
Lino block print of "bathroom crack"

second Lino block print of "bathroom crack"
etching
etching

Shown above are the prints from each of the metal etched plates - as before they are the reverse of the lino prints. Continuing the process from previously I combined these images into two plate etchings and also experimented with colour. Because the lino-to-metal process results in positive marks forming  negative marks, less black on the lino print transfers to less white or negative areas on the metal etched print. My combination etched prints rely on white areas -  paper showing through - to create layering and overlapping.  To enhance the effect, I worked on some of the plates by burnishing to create more negative areas, and also used plate extender to reduce colour intensity:
corner study of bathroom crack with burnishing and more wiping

The resultant marks are more restrained and constrained than the previous etchings and were developed from single images made on a single lino plate, whereas previously the original lino image went over four blocks and I used a portion of that image. They can all form part of a series of prints, exploring different starting points to make different marks and different combinations of plates.


single plate two colours

Two plate, each in a different colour

single plate, multi coloured

Saturday, 24 November 2012

Week eight - insignificant things

Following on from Ian Breakwell and Simon Pope, I am aware of how unaware we are of our surroundings. For example, some time ago I tried to draw from memory, my walk to university, but only drawing above the ground floor of the buildings I passed. This very difficult exercise highlighted how we never notice upper storeys of buildings, rarely looking above or below our eye-level and generally how unobservant we are. I am trying to incorporate aspects of the built environment in my work; linking my printmaking with my work as an architect.  It has lead me to research artists who use or record elements of the environment in their work.

I've looked at the prints of Tom Phillips who on his journey to work photographed every stop cock he passed in the pavement, and on the way home photographed those on the other side of the street.  He transferred these to form a large etching - Canto XXXII, 1983, which documents a specific observation on his journey in pictorial form, recording elements which would normally be of little significance.


Continuing my thoughts on highlighting the unremarkable,  I'm investigating accidents and interruptions, for example imperfections in building materials that are not usually noticed. Performing charcoal rubbings of surfaces brings up scratches and indentations that are usually overlooked and contrast with architectural precision  required in building.  By examining say floors, walls, ceilings of my house and outside, I could build up a new language of the environment, removed from the usual plans, sections, elevations - a record of what you would not usually describe. 

Shown below are the "Frottages" carried out with charcoal on a roll of specialist architectural detail paper (the medium itself being significant). Not only are imperfections shown up, but also the direction and speed of the work has an influence on the images.




These rubbings were scanned and printed, and some were reversed in photoshop:












Max Ernst is the obvious artist to reference for rubbings or "Frottage", but also the Boyle Family use architectural materials in their work. However, The Boyle Family use casts of actual materials they are describing, whereas mine are transformed onto paper, by rubbing and then manipulated in photoshop and also transformed by the etching process. The transformation through several processes continues my work on process itself.  These images not only enhance the imperfections described before, but also continue the "ghost" theme; they describe something which is no longer there; a memory.

I took one of the reversed images of a rubbing of the hall floor, and used the photocopy etching method described in week 2 to transfer the image onto a metal plate (ie: soak the photocopy image for a couple of minutes; place on worktop and dab on oil based ink, mixed with plate oil. Run through the press onto a degreased etching plate. Place in the aquatint box. Use the ink as acid resist and etch for 30 seconds - any longer and the ink would have been bitten away.)

I produced two prints, the first in black, and the second in yellow and black, blended at the edges giving a burnt out look. 


This process has resulted in images which are more haunting than before, floating, bearing only traces or memories of the original substance from which they were taken from. 

They are reminiscent of Rachel Whiteread's "Study for (Blue) Floor" - partly because of the subject matter (floor) and the diagonal in the composition, but also because she draws only part of the floor, which emerges from the background. She has hand drawn and painted this work onto graph paper - (again a medium used by architects; mine originated as a drawing  on architectural detail paper) - and it is this freely drawn nature that contrasts with the precision of the paper. 



Saturday, 17 November 2012

Week Seven De La Warr Pavilion, Ian Breakwell


Third year print makers went on a trip to Bexhill to meet up with tutor Nigel Oxley and visit Ian Breakwell's  exhibition  "Keep Things as They Are"at the De La Warr Pavilion.  I've been to the De La Warr many times and love this modernist icon. One of the highlights of the exhibition was the double video installation "The Other Side" which uses the staircase and balcony of the Pavilion as a backdrop to elderly couples waltzing to Shubert's "Nocturne in E Major", with the distant sound of the waves crashing in time to the pendulum swing of the camera as it pans to and fro across the balcony. It is a mesmerizing and moving piece about ageing, death and loss, filming ordinary people, performing a romantic dance at the end of their lives.

Breakwell's theme of the ordinary continues with his photographic diaries, recording seemingly arbitrary and unimportant events, unlike usual diaries. His "Walking Man" photographs the same man everyday,  viewed from his 3rd floor Spitalfields room, until the man disappears and is no longer seen walking the streets daily. 

I am drawn to Breakwell's idea that someone of no significance is given significance and meaning; that he observes things we take for granted and highlights them.  

Later in the week artist Simon Pope gave a lecture at The Cass, where he described walking as a contemporary art practice.  Pope is inviting people to engage, observe and understand the space around them. I think there is a link between Pope and Breakwell in their desire to imbue that which we take for granted with significance -  a theme which I find very interesting - and which relates to my own work.

Saturday, 10 November 2012

week six - more lino and etching



Investigating combining lino print with etching so the image plus its "ghost" and "negative" appear on the same sheet. For example, the black double loops at the left side are ghosted in the etching, top right of the image.



The technique for this involved printing the lino onto tissue in the wood press, then offsetting that print onto dampened Somerset paper, in the etching press. Leaving the paper caught between the rollers, a further two etching plates were printed one after the other, to get a combined offset lino with two plate coloured etching.

The lino part of the image bleeds off the two edges of the paper (although here appears more faded than it is), whilst the etching part is more conventionally positioned within a white border or "window".

I came across this Christopher Wool's print after I had done my prints shown above. I could add more lino images to my etchings.  However, before I saw Wool's print,  I had already decided to remove the square edges of the lino image, to remove the "window" from that part.
Christopher Wool, Untitled, Silkscreen 2009
www.luhringaustine.com

Using the same technique all over again, but this time cutting up the tissue of the offset lino:
choosing the piece of lino image

Choosing the piece of lino image - sitting on the cutting board - in itself an image I could explore....

Printing the lino, cutting the tissue, offsetting, double etch coloured print.....each print took a staggering two hours to print! A lengthy process!





Blue/black offset lino on two plate etching
Red offset lino on two plate etching
These prints contrast the lino image bled from the paper edge with the etching image more constrained in the picture window, hopefully setting up a tension. The contrasting colour of the lino image works best but needs to be printed over the etchings to stand out more. (Not sure what will happen to it printed over plate embossing, which at the moment I've managed to avoid).

All these prints obviously look different (and hopefully better) when viewed in the flesh rather than by camera phone. You can see the subtleties of layering of shapes and colours, which don't come out so well on photographs. 

So, further work on these plates would be: 
1. small section of lino printed last over etched plates
2. more lino images printed on etchings, looking at Wool's prints, either as the whole square lino plate or as sections.

And after that.....where next? Pushing the random marks further? Using photographic images and seeing what acid does to them? Bringing back a theme together with process? (Architecture would be good...linking my profession).

Friday, 2 November 2012

week five - the ghost of the lino

Following Rosemarie McGoldrick's comment on my post, I'm looking at the concept of Hauntology.  Initially I found a book blog in the guardian on line (www.guardian.co.uk/books/booksblog/2011/jun17/hauntology) which has pointed to many contemporary writers to investigate. (more of this later)

The idea of loss, absence, ghosts, also ties in with my research of Christopher Wool. Not only do his paintings incorporate the idea of mark making and rubbing out, adding and removal, addition and loss, but also he has been associated with "Process Art"  and an interest in abstract art and the process of painting.


Christopher Wool, Untitled 2003

Christopher Wool Tree Women (Light) 2005

I'm looking at a way of using the lino blocks to form etching plates, so the final prints record an absence of the original material; that is the etchings become the negative of the lino. The idea of repetition previously discussed will also be developed, with variations from one print to the other as well.

So, I am finding a way of transferring my lino block images to an etching plate. (The linos were themselves eaten away by acid - and so too will the etching plates be.)

The process:
Using the principle that oil based ink is acid resist, I relief inked a lino block, printed it onto butter paper in the wood press, used the butter paper image (still wet) and transferred it to a zinc plate via the etching press.
lino image transferred to metal
The metal plate, now with the oil based ink on it, was aquatinted, and placed in acid. So the positive lino image (now in red ink) remains untouched by the acid and therefore when intaglio printed will become a negative image.

I repeated the process with another lino plate, to get two etching plates. These were printed separately and together. I used different colours, printed them in different orders and printed them different ways up. 







These plates were printed over each other producing a layering of images and marks, ghost images of each other and negative images of the original lino plates.

plate on right,shown above, printed over brown plate on left
 plate on left shown above, printed over brown plate on  right


black on blue
Looking at Christopher Wool again, where are his marks from? Also, there is a similarity of colours in the layers of his silk screen. I'm interested in the idea of creating abstract shapes - removal of myself from the image or resultant marks, and the process I've adopted (lino through to etching) certainly creates an uncertainty of marks.
Christopher Wool Untitled 2007, silk screen


Wednesday, 31 October 2012

Week four - repetiton

 36 photographs and 12 diagrams
Mel Bochner at the Whitechapel Art Gallery - I find his reworking of his older pieces more interesting than his word paintings. 36 photographs and 12 diagrams photographs little wooden blocks in plan elevation and isometric, together with a corresponding diagram for each arrangement. It is a series of images,exploring repetition,  which when viewed together enable us to reconstruct the original sculpture. 

Four Smears: 1968/2010

Four smears is a process of photographing photographs, displayed in pairs of positive and negative, both in form and colour. "Photography is shown to be a process which self-produces new images rather than one which records exiting objects in from of the camera..." (Whitechapel blurb on Four Smears: 1968/2010)


Surface Dis/Tension (Recursive)
Also, Surface Dis/Tension (Recursive) 2012, where Bochner has rephotographed a wet and crumpled print investigating perspective, and hung it out to dry. He has printed it as both positive and negative again. The images have been laid on top of each other, but slightly out of kilter. 

I'm interested in his use of repetition and photography. Pushing the large lino pieces a little further, I decided to reprint them, on top of each other, but waiting for each layer to dry. Printed the first block four times to get four multiple coloured prints.


first block inked up in yellow
all four prints, first layer, in drying rack
second layer added 
I don't think the first layer was dry enough  as some of the yellow bled through. What a lengthy process!  All prints were numbered so the same order would be carried out each time. Note: registration method crucial here. (Last week's print wasn't registered properly - in particular because the lino ins't cut square). Paper was blotted between two sheets of damp tissue - tried without damping but result was no good.


third colour added
fourth/final colour
fourth/final colour with more extender