Thursday, 27 February 2020

Meditation 1: The cut

I did this print as a birthday card for a friend with Buddhist leanings. I felt I needed to do something meditative. So this.

For me, using my hands is when I am truly “in the moment”, when all of my being is engaged in this one thing. When I become aware of the sheer physicality of thought.

When I had a “proper job”, it was often a joy to do some photocopying. The repeated mundane actions helped cleanse my mind of the weight of competing priorities and then return, refreshed to my desk.

Hmm. I think I can feel a series coming on here.

Thursday, 20 February 2020

Coventry Open 2020. 29 February – 19 April


Really delighted to have Purgatory (see also previous post) chosen* for this exhibition. Good to have something on show in the run up to City of Culture next year. So please pay a visit if you can.

Unlike the Rugby Open, Coventry allows you to add a few words by way of description/explanation. So I wrote this: “Waiting Room. Purgatory on earth. Is this what waiting for St Peter will be like? How do you jump the queue?” No idea what they'll do with that. We shall see.

This is the biggest print I've done so far, and was to some degree a test of the limits of my press. The image is 48cm x 35cm, printed on to A2. If I wanted to go bigger, I'd have to go for the spoon method, which could be tiring.

There is an art-historical inspiration which is this etching by Emil Orlik** from about 1896 that I saw on sale towards the end of last year.

I've seen a couple of examples of this print, one described the scene as a Theatre and the other as Waiting Room. Anyway, its a group of disconnected people sitting closely together. I didn't buy it as it was a bit expensive for me, especially being an etching. Woodcuts are more my thing. Anyway, it's still a great lesson in drawing, I think.

* When I went along to pick up the rejected print, I found out that 58 had been chosen from around 300 entries. Waaaaa!

**Orlik was a Jugendstil/Secessionist artist who, following the enthusiasm for Japonisme, went to Japan around 1900 to learn about woodcut at the feet of Japanese masters.

Saturday, 15 February 2020

Coventry Open 2020 - submissions

I felt it would be a good plan to get to the Herbert at opening time to avoid the worst of Storm Dennis. Plenty of other people had the same idea, too. So if determination is a sign of quality, we're in for a good show.

Today is also HAP Grieshaber's 111th birthday, so I'm taking that as a good omen for printmakers.

These are the pieces I put in for selection.

The first is a woodcut called Sounding – The Bells. It will be (I hope) the first in a series sounding the depths of my life. It should add up to an unreliable autobiography, as I drop a weighted line into the swirling ocean of my past, and make images based upon what I hit. Things of great importance and none. Things that affected me directly, or only tangentially.



Anyway, when I moved to Coventry in 1975 I was struck by how the city wore its damage like a badge, saying, "Remember, this is what war does.” We have so many swaggering, bellicose leaders these days, it is a message worth repeating. I think the choice of wood adds to the violence of the image. I also didn't let the ink fully dry between layers, so the colours fight with each other, too.

This second one is a linocut based on a number of drawings I made while sitting in a hospital waiting room. I'd never tried drawing people in public before, and I was struck by how preoccupied everyone was with their books, papers and devices. Trying to forget where they were.

I called it Purgatory because of the waiting to know if the news is good, or bad. And also acknowledging the inferno of the other print.

Just have to wait now to see if either gets in. My own little purgatory.