Baren Digest Saturday, 21 September 2002 Volume 20 : Number 1967 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: David Bull Date: Sat, 21 Sep 2002 10:01:59 +0900 Subject: [Baren 19282] Re: Mechanics ... Maria wrote: > After about the 20th one, the 40th, the movements become like > driving on a highway: it isn't exactly "easy" or "requiring no attention > to detail", but after a while and it's tough to tell whether it was me > driving all the way. Printing is meditative, beautifully repetitive. Now _this_ I will go along with! Perhaps it's a 'quibble', but even as I reject the term 'mechanical' I will completely accept the 'repetitive' part. Perhaps we are actually talking about the same 'mood', but just using different words. Printing is 'mindless' - in the sense of being able to completely forget what you are doing, just like when you drive home from the office and when you are pulling into your home driveway you realize that you weren't actually 'there' during the drive time. Presumably we are describing a phenomenon where your body is so well trained at the particular job that your mind can switch off conscious control while things proceed. ** Curiously enough, just as we are having this discussion, I just a few minutes ago finished up the printing work on one print. After a day or so for other work, my 'cycle' will begin again ... Dave ------------------------------ From: "Gillyin Gatto" Date: Mon, 27 Aug 1956 09:56:20 -0700 Subject: [Baren 19283] carving/printing what a great discussion many timesI find the images in the grain of the block I draw right on the block using chalk and charcoal or black marker or brush it may or may not be a tight drawing i do both - - work semi tight from my photos or - -use the gouge as a paint brush /white pencil with only the image in my head i was influenced by german expressionism Kathe Kollwitz-- how she could express an idea with so FEW gouge marks! Felix Volloton- the graceful sensuousness of his flowing black and white shapes also- with few gouge marks every time i carve i am creating a white line drawing/painting with the gouge i love tiny u-gouges but then again I love BIG u-gouges too they- for making the bigger more striking white spaces small gouge for lines preparing it all with the knife I outline my important lines setting the course for me a good working knife drawing gets me going carving is really exhilerating and learning to incorporate the carve marks into ones design selectively rubbing the background carve marks to create a pattern INTUITIVELY- the grain speaks the lines and says-- here , here,and here then I HEAR - just as MARIA says I call it TREESPEAKING she calls it OUT OF THE WOOD the blocks definetly speak to wild women/men- telling them where to carve and plywood since it is actually tortured/ (highly processed) seems to have ALOT to say! CARVING is creative/intense/exciting and PRINTING for me is RHYTHMIC i like some up beat music that keeps me in the rhythm of rolling/ pivoting rolling/ pivoting laying paper down rubbing also- rhythmically- with the baren round and round and round switch hands round and round- the OTHER way i feel like i have had a great rhythmic/ aerobic workout-physically and mentally- i feel proud of yes! 30-60 hanging- up- to- dry prints all hand rubbed that is an excellent feeling of accomplishment psychically- i feel like i have been communicated- to by this- to me- still living, spirit of a tree...... neither CARVING/designing nor PRINTING are ever mechanical for me mechanical-- is matting /framing/shrink wrapping ad infinatum one has to pay attention to the INK I am-- oily on dry paper-- each block is different some wood -you might have to clean it off after so many prints cuz it get clogged up some blocks take alot of ink some only a little inking takes extreme attention! specks of dust and dog/cat hair are constantly trying to get in on the fun i like to be near a bright window that will make it easy to cast a reflection onto the block and catch those little specks before laying the paper down pulling the first good proof is always a thrill then i take a proof and fasten it backwards onto that bright window so i can see exactly where each gouge mark is I take another proof and paint on it with white acrylic or chalk, if its dry, where i think the image should go its finding the whites- the light- and bringing it out with the gouge when you have achieved something you set out to do with a block of wood it is quite satisfying it always amazes me to think of all the blocks sitting on my shelves with real images in them created by printing a few gouge marks i love the simplicity and naturalness of the whole process or also- when a happy surprise in the grain does a really neat thing for ones design a gift from the wood to me Gillyin ------------------------------ From: Cucamongie#aol.com Date: Fri, 20 Sep 2002 22:51:02 -0400 Subject: [Baren 19284] baren collaborative print personally, I think a giant dayglo Elvis being impersonated by a flying saucer printed on black velvet sounds good :) Sarah ------------------------------ From: "Tyrus Clutter" Date: Fri, 20 Sep 2002 21:40:25 -0600 Subject: [Baren 19285] fireman prints I sold two firemen's prints at the reception we had on friday 20th. Can = someone tell me again to whom I should make the check out, and where to = send it? It was Maria's print and John Center's that sold. However, even = though I have another of Maria's, I was planning to send it as part of a = set to Goddard at UofK (Steve can you e-mail me info on what to do with = this off list?). Maria, or someone else, are there more? TyRuS ><~><~><~><~><~><~><~><~><~>< Prof. Tyrus Clutter Professor of Painting, Printmaking, & Art History Director of Friesen Art Galleries Dept. of Art & Music Northwest Nazarene University 623 Holly St. Nampa, Idaho 83686 TRClutter#NNU.edu (208) 467-8398 ------------------------------ From: G Wohlken Date: Fri, 20 Sep 2002 23:47:30 +0000 Subject: [Baren 19286] Re: Baren Digest V20 #1966 >>the design part and cutting part (is) the most grueling >>for me, both mentally and physically. Printing is just...mechanics! >> Designing is the worst part for me, too. It almost makes me sick. I'm working on one today that has caused so much angst I think I could sleep two days to get back into some kind of mental shape to go at it again. I spent all day drawing, drawing, drawing, drawing. I usually work out the design elements before I put it on the board, unlike Maria, who says she designs right on the board. I don't trust myself enough for that. I have to see it first. I wouldn't want to take a chance and cut some area thinking that would be the thing to do, and have it be one of those "ooops, that wasn't what I wanted, after all" moments. I've tried that and realize I'm just not that good an artist to get it right the first time. Printing's easy enough, but boring after a while. I do have a system that works for registration (taping the paper down one side of the registration board and lifting it to add each new color block) and I use oil based ink which waits nicely for you despite its sticky ways. I get mad at it, but it's my fault, not its. If I'm too excited to find out what I've got on that board, I might be sloppy about my first couple of prints because I just can't wait to see. I usually settle down after I get my thrill, and after I clean all the goo off my hands and make a pact with myself that it's time to get serious. I like carving better than printing, though. Since I print entirely by hand, printing the first six or so is satifying but after that, I don't think it's that much fun anymore for any particular print I'm working on. Carving just feels good--the knife in your hand, the sound of the wood as it is being gouged or scooped or needled or razorbladed out of the board--it's such good work after the grueling drawing sessions. But with printing, I hear myself saying sighingly "Ten down, twenty to go", and then I feel sorry for myself because I feel trapped and a little voice says, "you could be hiking". Then when I get on number #25, I start perking up again, but I'm tired. The only thing I like about printing is the moment I get to pull that print I've been barening away on for twenty minutes and it's perfect. Twenty minutes for an imperfect print is heartbreaking. That's how it is for me, anyway. Gayle Ohio ------------------------------ From: Sharri LaPierre Date: Fri, 20 Sep 2002 21:15:25 -0700 Subject: [Baren 19287] Re: Baren Digest V20 #1966 Carving over printing? Isn't it all part & parcel? I guess I look at it as Act I and Act II. Act I is the beginning of the voyage - sometimes I sketch a few basic ideas for placement of shapes (I hate getting a block all done and wishing I'd moved this a little further up or down, or whatever), If it's something that makes a difference in its orientation then I sometimes transfer the shapes from my drawing onto the block - otherwise I just start drawing. and get the shapes, but no detail, where I want them before carving. But, when I finally do get to the carving the chips fly. I find it mesmerizing and can carve for 8 hrs. and it feels like 15 min. Well, that used to be the case before arthritis reared its ugly head. Act II is just pure fun - there are so many possibilities. I have to explore most all of them before settling on the way I want to edition. The result is I always have a dozen color proofs, and trial proofs, before I finally get to the finished product. Conversations are constant (in other words, I talk to myself) all the way through both acts - and the wood, and sometimes the inks answer. The paper is usually very quiet - probably from being confined to a plastic bag. Although, come to think of it, it does voice an opinion when I'm choosing which one to use - Take Me! No, I'm Better! Hey! Over Here! Sharri ------------------------------ End of Baren Digest V20 #1967 *****************************