We bought some of those make-your-own card blanks and envelopes earlier in the year at a reduced price. So that pretty much decided I'd be printing our Christmas cards this year. My feeling was I'd have to come up with something suitably Goth, but still Christmas.
Seeing as I've lived most of my life in and around Coventry, and with City of Culture coming up in 2021, it didn't take me that long to think of the Coventry Carol. It reminds us that there are other children in this story, and it didn't end well for them. Makes me proud of Cov to come up with something so dark and so world class.
Anyway, here's my effort:
The black is lino, but I used a piece of plank for the blue, scrubbed with a wire brush to heighten the grain. First of all I printed it without any cutting of the plank, and played around with the paper copy, cutting out bits to work out how much of the plank I needed to cut away.
Here's another picture of printing in progress with completed cards hanging up to dry. That's home-made printing press number 1 in the corner. Number 2 is coming soon. Just watch this space.
Thursday, 12 December 2019
Tuesday, 26 November 2019
Rugby Open 19 (23 Nov 2019- 11 Jan 2020)
In mid-October, my
wife came home from town with a card advertising for submissions to
this annual art exhibition. So I decided to give it a go. My first
thought was to submit Wolf in a Sheepskin – it was the standard I
felt I had to aim for, anyway.
I was booked on a
linocut workshop with Eric Gaskell at the beginning of November. Eric
is a formidable printmaker and I attend a weekly art class he leads,
so I knew I'd learn a lot. This is the print that emerged. The
starting point was a few still-life drawings I had done at the other
class. The skull, by the way, is a replica belonging to my son.
As I worked on the
print, this Ernst Barlach/Kathe Kollwitz vibe emerged that I wasn't
expecting when I started out. I was so pleased with it I thought I'd
give it a name and enter it for the exhibition. (It's called “Still
Life with wine Glass”.
My wife was away
that weekend and I was on a roll, so I carried on over the next day
or so to create another image. This one inspired by another Feline and Strange song that had been haunting me. Medusa is a song of rape
survival and victim blaming. So the image is Medusa haunted by the
frozen faces of those who hate her, always reminding her, even when
she closes her eyes.
This one is a
woodcut. It's different to lino in that it is inclined to fight back,
and the act of creating the image requires more... violence. Which
seems appropriate somehow.
Anyway, I decided
both were better than Wolf, so I submitted both. A panel of 4 people,
who change each year, decide which entrants should go into the
exhibition. So I felt having 2 relatively different images increased
the chance of at least one being chosen.
So I was delighted
to get an email confirming that Medusa had been chosen. But when I
turned up to collect the rejected print, it turned out that Still
Life had been accepted and Medusa rejected. Administrative error. The
plague of working life even affects art galleries. Just so you know.
Still delighted,
though.
Monday, 25 November 2019
A bit of a catch-up 2: Wolf in a sheepskin
Those of you that
know me will know that I am a big fan of the Berlin-based band Feline and Strange. Such a big fan I'm willing to put my hand in my pocket
and support them through Patreon.
One of their songs,
“How much” from the album OUT begins,
“A wolf in a
sheepskin has to eat grass,
To avoid his
detection he walks on broken glass.”
It's a song about
being an outsider, trying to fit into a world where they are feared
and reviled. And how Death sometimes seems close at hand, weighing
our good deeds against the bad....
Anyway, I made this
print, primarily for the band, to welcome them back from the
States,where they were recording their next album. It's a fairly
literal take on the opening lines, but I think conveys that even in
the skin of a sheep, there are unwritten rules of being a sheep he
just doesn't get...
Thursday, 21 November 2019
A bit of a catch-up 1: Titi von Tranz
The last few years in August I've been going to the Phoenix Alternative Festival at Llanfyllin Workhouse in Wales. One of the regular artists was Danielle Miller, performing as Titi von Tranz, singing 1930s Cabaret songs mostly. A kind and generous artist, loved by audience and fellow performers alike.
She died suddenly in July, which was a great shock to everyone.
On the day of her funeral I sat at home and began to draw. The end result was this linocut print.
The design incorporates 2 of Titi's songs. On the left is Tiddles, "My Girl's Pussy" and on the right is "My little green cactus" on the balcony.
I gave copies to friends of mine and Dani's at the festival and their reactions encouraged me to continue.
She died suddenly in July, which was a great shock to everyone.
On the day of her funeral I sat at home and began to draw. The end result was this linocut print.
I gave copies to friends of mine and Dani's at the festival and their reactions encouraged me to continue.
Change of Direction
Rather than leave this to gather dust, from here begins my log of art stuff. Previous to this post you will find stuff linked to my previous work life in educational technology and research. Nerdy. I wouldn't bother going there.
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