[Baren]: The mailing list / discussion forum for woodblock printmaking. Baren Digest Sunday, 8 November 1998 Volume 05 : Number 335 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Gary Luedtke Date: Sat, 7 Nov 1998 11:07:22 -0500 Subject: [Baren 2014] to St. Louis and back In response to Richard's >Spontaneity is a wonderful thing, and I feel that it ought to exist right >where it is most at home, with a pencil in one hand, perhaps an eraser >in the other and a white sheet of paper before you. Another method, Richard, is two feet from your eyes, and at your fingertips. The computer. I reiterate here that I do not carve and print my own work, I design only, so getting the ideas down on paper is virtually the entire scope of my work. I started, and still do, with a sketch on paper, drawn by hand. As I am still working on a raft of drawings I've done over the last few years before my computer, I have not progressed to the point where all the work is done on the computer, nor do I foresee that happening, as I enjoy drawing by hand, and the quality of a pen line cannot yet be duplicated by a mouse. However, the computer does have advantages elsewhere in the process. Once the drawing is down on paper, I can scan it into the computer, and then a number of things can be done to improve it, and bring it to the point of completion in a much more rapid fashion. Any number of changes or experiments can be made, pushing the composition in whatever creative direction you want to go, without the need for erasers. You can keep your original, as a base, and spin off any of your experiments, keeping all of them for future evaluation. You can instantly resize the composition, to a thumbnail for example, to see it from a distance, or invert it to check for balance, or to lighten or intensify the color overall or to balance a certain area. You name it, it can be done. In short, it is a wonderful tool which encourages creativity at that point when you wonder how you could make this a better compostion, should I try this or do that? You can do all of them and see where they lead in a relatively short time. Gary ------------------------------ From: Gary Luedtke Date: Sat, 7 Nov 1998 11:17:01 -0500 Subject: [Baren 2015] 'One-point' lesson ... A question, Dave, on your one-pointer. You stress that the "softness" of the paper is the object rather than its moistness. As you are working with a water based pigment, I see the dampness, or proper moistness of the paper as achieving two things. It does soften the paper which makes it more receptive to relief printing, but does it not also facilitate the dispersion of the pigment which at this point is mixed with paste on the blocks? This is not a quality of softness but of fluidity also isn't it? I have seen prints whose pigment looks like a direct printing from the block, in that if there were brush marks left on the blocks, they were printed that way on the paper. I have also seen prints where the color printed was wonderfully smooth and fluid looking in the sense of being perfectly and evenly dispersed on the paper, no brush marks visible at all. Isn't this a quality achieved by moistness more than softness? Gary ------------------------------ From: Gayle Wohlken Date: Sat, 07 Nov 1998 12:34:06 -0500 Subject: [Baren 2016] Re: Baren Digest V5 #334 Richard Steiner asked about our methods to reaching the final print. The print I am working on for the exchange was drawn at least 15 times. I finally got it the way I wanted it and proceeded to carve it. I pulled my first print last night and really liked it until I started looking at the lines. Places where I knew I carved well showed little splits. (I used poplar, to which I'm accustomed). My style is bold so that was okay, but I wasn't prepared for those splits. Ordinarily they wouldn't bother me, but after seeing the quality of work we have from other Baren members, I feel pretty insecure. Now I feel I must do the whole thing over on another kind of wood. Gayle Wohlken ------------------------------ From: StudioJNC@aol.com Date: Sat, 7 Nov 1998 13:25:13 EST Subject: [Baren 2017] Re: Baren Digest V5 #334 Gayle Oh do I know what you mean!!! I have carved two different images and they looked soooo good, until the big test. My lines were not great. I honestly do not know HOW you can get such beautifully carved lines in a key block. I have tried GOOD sharp knives, Xacto knives, razor blades and still cannot get nice lines. GGGGGRRRRRR! Speaking of nice lines. I just returned from a trip ;to Paris. On the Quai Voltaire, left bank, right, directly across from the Louvre is a marvelous gallery. It has the most wonderful Japanese art on display. It inspired me very much , so much that when my prints are completed I am going to try my hand at the technique. I find printmaking much more difficult than painting or drawing. But I remain undaunted in spite of all of my crooked lines!!! Just put two new , crooked line prints on my Web Page. Be kind. Toodles Jeanne ------------------------------ From: StudioJNC@aol.com Date: Sat, 7 Nov 1998 13:47:46 EST Subject: [Baren 2018] Re: Baren Digest V5 #334 Graham Congratulations on your successes. Just returned from St. Ives in Cornwall. Neat looking lighthouse there, thought of you. Jeanne ------------------------------ From: Ramsey Household Date: Sat, 07 Nov 1998 11:51:42 -0800 Subject: [Baren 2019] Re: to St. Louis and back This is Carolyn, Gary Luedtke wrote: > Another method, Richard, is two feet from your eyes, and at your > fingertips. The computer. What program do you use to do all of these wonderful things? Is it only available for a Mac, or can you use a regular PC? ------------------------------ From: Wanda Robertson Date: Sat, 07 Nov 1998 12:35:33 -0700 Subject: [Baren 2020] Re: to St. Louis and back Hi! I'm so glad to be able to contribute one little thing to this wonderful discussion group! I also have a Mac, but there are plenty of paint/photo/drawing programs for IBM type computers. Adobe Photoshop is a great(but spendy) one for both platforms. You can do amazing stuff with it. I believe there's one for the PC called "PhotoShop Pro" that is not so expensive, and I've heard good things about it. I've been using my computer to resize, reverse, enlarge, etc. my drawings (for ink linocut so far - but I'm getting me nerve up to do a hanga woodcut) Of course, the computer will only do *so* much, it won't do the actual drawing (well, it can - but I prefer the hand drawn image, too) and it won't do any of the carving. But it can speed up some parts of the process. It may not be for everyone, though. Wanda ------------------------------ From: Gary Luedtke Date: Sat, 7 Nov 1998 16:09:37 -0500 Subject: [Baren 2021] Re: to St. Louis and back Carolyn, I use Photo-Styler for my art work. There are many programs available, but I found this one easy to use and quite versatile. I got it several years ago, and as quickly as these software companies change hands or the names of their software products, I would guess it's out there in a revised version and until a different title now. I use a regular pc, the only macs I have I just brought back from the orchards of Wisconsin, they're my favorite apple. Gary ------------------------------ From: David Bull Date: Sun, 08 Nov 1998 08:29:00 +0900 Subject: [Baren 2022] Re: 'One-point' lesson ... Gary wrote: > ... the dampness ... does it not > also facilitate the dispersion of the pigment? Just what the water actually _does_ down there in the paper is a topic suitable for a lot of interesting and complicated research. I don't pretend to have any understanding of what happens down there on the molecular level, and I would be a bit suspicious of anyone who claims to 'know'. We are working with water-based pigment that must be (take your pick here) driven into the paper / allowed to disperse through the paper. Three cases: 1) When the paper is bone dry (and I'm only speaking of normally sized Japanese washi here), it doesn't matter how hard you try, the pigment does not end up being evenly distributed throughout the body of the paper. If we were to paint it on directly with a brush, it will _not_ disperse between the fibres of its own accord. If we mash it with a baren, it is _not_ pushed between the fibres properly. 3) When the paper is wet wet wet, the pigment will not penetrate either. I would imagine that this is simply because all the small spaces down in there are simply 'full' of water, and there is no room for the 'new' water/pigment mixture. 2) But when the paper is in that 'in-between' condition, 'soft' not 'hard', 'damp' not 'wet', the pigment fills the body of the paper beautifully, and with only a moderate amount of pressure needed. *** > brush marks ... > Isn't this a quality achieved by moistness more than softness? Brush marks come (whether needed or accidental) because the layer of pigment _on the block_ is not completely smooth, but is left in alternating 'thick' 'thin' layers. This can be caused by the brush hairs actually being too coarse, or by there being too much paste - this makes the pigment/water/paste mixture too 'stiff', and it thus won't 'lie down' smoothly on the wood. This striped 'pattern' of pigment on the wood surface is then simply transferred directly to the paper by the printing process, resulting in visible brush marks in the print. It is not overly affected by changes in the moisture in the paper itself. Dave ------------------------------ From: David Bull Date: Sun, 08 Nov 1998 12:48:06 +0900 Subject: [Baren 2023] Lunch-time musings ... Gayle wrote: > ... I wasn't prepared for those >splits. Ordinarily they wouldn't bother me, but after >seeing the quality of work we have from other Baren >members, I feel pretty insecure. Now I feel I must do the >whole thing over on another kind of wood. Jeanne wrote: >I have carved two different images and they looked soooo >good, until the big test. My lines were not great. I >honestly do not know HOW you can get such beautifully >carved lines in a key block. ... >... It has the most wonderful Japanese art >on display. It inspired me very much , so much that when >my prints are completed I am going to try my hand at the >technique. Boy oh boy! Two of the most important postings ever made on [Baren] - and on the same day ... Here is a topic that strikes right to the heart of what this forum is all about, and reading these messages made me think immediately that I should put a notice up on the [Baren] Home Page: WARNING - This forum may be hazardous to your (artistic) health! I'm speaking of course, of _influence_, and the fact that it is a very two-edged sword. I think none of us would deny that having contact with examples of well-done work can be a great stimulus and encouragement to improve our own work, but when these outside influences cause us to doubt our own abilities, or even worse, to push us in directions that we shouldn't be going, they can, I feel, be counterproductive. Gayle, you said about those splits - 'ordinarily they wouldn't bother me'. But what we _want_ from you is an 'ordinary' Gayle Wohlken print! Jeanne, you said 'I honestly do not know HOW you can get such beautifully carved lines in a key block', but when I look at those prints on your web page, _my_ vote (this is a purely personal and subjective viewpoint) goes to the prints done without lines - I find them vivid and exciting, and much more interesting than the one with the black outline, which I think lacks the life of the others. Please don't be put off by these comments, but it seems to me that you had found a real 'voice' there in those musician prints, and I think that to take too much influence from Japanese outline methods would not necessarily take you in a desirable direction. (By the way, Jeanne's prints are at: http://www.atlantic.net/~theadm/gallery/printroo.htm) Maybe I'm making too much of this. After all, in the text at the bottom of your page, you say 'The way that I do wood block printing will change as I further experiment with this wonderful art technique'. I suppose you might hear my comments as a request for you to 'stand still' and just keep making the same prints over and over again.  Well, I certainly can't/won't ask _that_, but ... ... how much influence is _too_ much? *** I've finished my peanut butter sandwiches, so it's back into the workroom for now, but I'll be thinking about this as I work this afternoon. I'll very much look forward to hearing what Gayle, Jeanne, and the other [Baren] members have to say about this. Are we 'good' for each other? Or ... Dave ------------------------------ From: Jean Eger Date: Sat, 07 Nov 1998 23:41:17 -0800 Subject: [Baren 2024] Re: Baren Digest V5 #334 Dave, I agree with the others: that you are providing a glimpse into a world that we will probably never enter, but about which we greatly desire understanding. So keep writing! Jean Eger ------------------------------ From: Graham Scholes Date: Sun, 8 Nov 1998 00:49:00 -0800 (PST) Subject: [Baren 2025] The computer issue is back Gary wrote..... >However, the computer does have advantages elsewhere in the process. Once >the drawing is down on paper, I can scan it into the computer, and then a >number of things can be done to improve it, and bring it to the point of >completion in a much more rapid fashion. Any number of changes or >experiments can be made, pushing the composition in whatever creative >direction you want to go, without the need for erasers. You can keep your >original, as a base, and spin off any of your experiments, keeping all of >them for future evaluation. You can instantly resize the composition, to >a thumbnail for example, to see it from a distance, or invert it to check >for balance, or to lighten or intensify the color overall or to balance a >certain area. You name it, it can be done. Say that is quite something.......I do all this without a computer..... and I use my Human skills to do any size I want. >In short, it is a wonderful tool which encourages creativity at that point >when you wonder how you could make this a better compostion, should I try >this or do that? You can do all of them and see where they lead in a >relatively short time. Where does it say that time is an issue with Fine Art. I'm only aware of time being a factor with Commercial Art. >I use a regular pc, the only macs I have I just brought back from the >orchards of Wisconsin, they're my favorite apple. I once read that every major newspaper on the N American continent uses a Mac because of it graphics capabilities. You may be missing out on something here Gary. Graham ps. for the newbies.....please develop your drawing skill, composition knowledge, and colour senses and you won't need to bother with a computer. ------------------------------ From: Graham Scholes Date: Sun, 8 Nov 1998 01:00:58 -0800 (PST) Subject: [Baren 2026] Re: to St. Louis and back Richard in Kyoto wrote.... >Working with the sketch(es), analysing the colors >and number of blocks, the printing order and so much more is crucial to >producing a satisfactory print. I constantly teach that, the first stage, >the creative drawing of the image, its reworking, redrawing, throwing away >and starting again, ALL the artistic activities, are necessary and have >nothing to so with craftsmanship, everything to do with art. Once you have >an image you like, that you want to make into a woodblock print, the artist >(in you) gets up and leaves the room, and the artisan, craftsman, comes in >and goes to work, which includes the introduction of no new material or >elements. In Kyoto and Tokyo, there are still plenty of pro carvers and >printers left. If you were to hire one of them to do a piece for you, you >wouldn't want them to look at your design, and decide that it should be >changed here or there. The same attitude applies when you yourself are >both artist and artisan. Jumping into a project, beginning to carve, then >realizing that you really want something moved over to the left a little, >something else removed altogether, something more added over there, only >wastes your time and your money, since you have to throw away that piece of >wood and grab another in order to finish the piece. Spontaneity is a >wonderful thing, and I feel that it ought to exist right where it is most >at home, with a pencil in one hand, perhaps an eraser in the other and a >white sheet of paper before you. I have not deleted any of that written by Richard, I want to read it again and again....and invite you to join me. You sure hit the nail on the head, Richard Thanks Graham Everyone has a photographic memory. Some just don't have film. ------------------------------ From: Graham Scholes Date: Sun, 8 Nov 1998 01:03:53 -0800 (PST) Subject: [Baren 2027] Re: to St. Louis and back Gary wrote.... >I use a regular pc, the only macs I have I just brought back from the >orchards of Wisconsin, they're my favorite apple. Did you PC'er know about this...... Macintosh - we might not get everything right, but at least we knew the century was going to end. Graham ------------------------------ From: Graham Scholes Date: Sun, 8 Nov 1998 01:16:31 -0800 (PST) Subject: [Baren 2028] The Art Of It...... >Gayle wrote: >> ... I wasn't prepared for those >>splits. Ordinarily they wouldn't bother me, but after >>seeing the quality of work we have from other Baren >>members, I feel pretty insecure. Now I feel I must do the >>whole thing over on another kind of wood. > >Jeanne wrote: >>I have carved two different images and they looked soooo >>good, until the big test. My lines were not great. I >>honestly do not know HOW you can get such beautifully >>carved lines in a key block. ... Hey people, it is these small unimportant marks, blemishes or non perfect and technically incorrect thingies that separate you from the crowd. They are or could become your signature in the art you are doing. You should never be influenced by perfection of technique over the expression of image. The Art Of It...... Just do it and let your marks on paper express YOU..... Keep plugging and enjoy. Dave wrote.... ... how much influence is _too_ much? When you copy and sign it, calling it your own...... Graham If you feel you're too small to make a difference, you've never been in bed with a mosquito. ------------------------------ End of Baren Digest V5 #335 ***************************