Sunday, September 27, 2009

Printsy Interview - Melody Knight Leary

Blog:
Etsy:
MelodyKnightLeary.etsy.com

Brief Bio
Melody Leary was born and raised in southeastern Connecticut.
While at the Hartford Art School, Leary majored in art education and went on to teach high school art for the next 35 years. An artist with a lifelong passion for printmaking, Leary has shared this enthusiasm with hundreds of students. Largely self-taught, her interest in printmaking evolved over many years as she experimented with various methods including; relief, intaglio, lithography, silkscreen, collagraphs, monotypes and less toxic processes that include photopolymer techniques. Leary’s work has been exhibited throughout the northeast and juried shows throughout the country.

How did you get started in printmaking?
Believe it or not, I vividly remember my first linocut while in elementary school. Loved everything about it and wished I could do more. In high school I had the opportunity to do a couple of additional relief prints using wood & linoleum as well as monotypes and silkscreen. Every time I had the opportunity to use ink, I was happy. After college I decided to delve into the world of printmaking on my own and haven’t looked back! For me, making a print means engaging in a private discourse with the work, through its countless transformations, in an attempt to evoke for myself some unexpected vision. As a printmaker, this exchange is sometimes made visible as working proofs are successively pulled from a plate. The results enable me to see, simultaneously, the original grasping of an idea and its subsequent exploration, including the discarding or reworking of images.


Describe where you work.
I am extremely fortunate to have a 20 X 30’ studio space. My husband added it as an addition to our home and it has windows on 3 sides looking out over the treetops. It is equipped with a Rembrandt Graphic Arts elephant press that I was fortunate enough to find second had for a great price.

What's your favourite printmaking process?
It is difficult for me to choose a favorite process because I like each for different reasons. My first love was collagraphs for their rich textures and the sculptural nature of creating the plate. The graphic nature of black & white relief prints always draw my attention, numerous ways of working in intaglio are endlessly fascinating, the layering of colors and textures while creating a silkscreen is exciting, and combining any and all processes rich with layers and mystery. I am currently focusing my efforts on photopolymer processes after having taken a workshop with Keith Howard back in ’95 in Peace River Alberta.


What's your creative process for any given print? (eg. sketch first? Pre-planned or free-form?)
I start out with a general idea that I seek to visualize then use sketches to work out the overall concept and composition. I reference my photographs, not for directly taking a picture and re-creating it, but rather as a starting place. More often than not, I create something that is quite different, but the photos are just a launching point. Once I’m happy with the image I determine which print technique will be best suited to the image and what I’m trying to convey. Sometimes I jump in and work directly on a plate or surface, building as I go and other times I work from a drawing transferred onto the plate. For linocuts or woodcuts I usually have the design worked out before I start. With monotypes or etching, once I start the piece, it can change direction as I work as I leave myself open to unexpected opportunities.


What do you enjoy most about printmaking?
Everything. The smell of the inks, the energy involved in working the plate, the feel of the paper and of course the magic of the press all play a role in printmaking’s allure. Like art itself, printmaking is about discovery, experimentation and process. Ultimately, it is the process that draws me to the medium; figuring out what I want in an image and then creating the circumstances and processes to achieve that goal. Printmaking is loaded with creative problems, and part of the passion it inspires is finding the best possible creative solution to satisfy a visual problem. There are always new challenges to be met and unlimited possibilities. At the end of a printing session, it is always magical to find out what lies beneath the blankets.

What's your least favorite part of the process?
Believe it or not, getting started on a new project when I have all of these ideas and I need to decide which road to take. With so many opportunities I become so indecisive that I end up finding other things to do, like housework, yard-work, etc. However, once I step into the studio and start working, I resent all those mundane tasks that take time away from my work and end up craving all the studio time I can manage.


What are your inspirations (other artists, people, places, events, etc.)?
Nature, the environment, just my everyday surroundings and life in general are my inspiration. Sometimes I work on a piece for weeks, but I cannot explain what I am searching for, or for that matter, what is finally resolved. I can site the sources for some of the imagery, but I am at a loss to say why those resonate within me in the first place. I know I am not interested in producing an art of purely formal concerns, but neither am I at peace with work bent solely on representation; I’m caught between the formal, the representational and the expressionist content. This exchange, which is often unconscious, leads me to unexpected revelations about feelings and ideas. The essence of art making for me is that each time a viewer is engaged by a work, the creative process is regenerated through the language of the work itself, for which there can be no translation.


How has your work changed and evolved since you started?
Printmaking makes you think in steps; the development of the image, the creation of the plate, the inking process all make you slow down and consider your various options. It also teaches you to be open to unexpected outcomes and encourages experimentation as those options become more familiar. I am also much more aware of the many hazards of traditional printmaking and have made efforts to use less toxic materials, processes and techniques whenever possible.


How do you get past creative slumps?
I play around with photography and take lots of shots for reference material. Also, I turn to my sketchbook when I’m in a creative slump and find that sketching keeps me in a creative mode. Visiting museums and galleries and lots of reading also helps. You never know what will spark an idea for a new print and sometimes you just need to take a break from things and let ideas “ferment”.

How do you promote your work?
Recently, I’ve been putting my work up on various websites to develop an online presence; MyArtSpace.com, Art House Co Op, and Etsy to name a few. One of my favorites is Inkteraction, a wonderful site for printmakers. I’ve also created a blog to journal my studio work. It’s also important to participate in local exhibitions and various exchange projects.

Any other comments or advice for others who want to try making hand-pulled prints?
A print is simply an indentation or mark on a surface left by the pressure of an object brought into contact with it. Given a few stencils or some rubber stamps and ink, anyone could make a print. Start experimenting with some basic monotypes. Simply inking up objects and pressing them to a surface can produce wonderful results with a minimum of equipment. Basic relief techniques such as linoleum prints or woodcuts can be easily explored; and keep in mind that there are great books available that will guide you through a process step by step.

"The great thing about printmaking is that it brings the element of sport into artmaking." – unknown

Tuesday, September 22, 2009

Who's Printsy This Week

We've got a special "Who's Printsy" this week for two reasons: firstly, I was away last week from the computer and missed the posting. Normally, that would just go by the wayside; but concurrent with that missed post was a flood of new Printsy members. I'd like to introduce you to some of the new printmakers of Printsy!

Dandelion Postcard by nottapixiepress
you can think of hollywood as high school by travisweller
Revelation 6 3-4, The Four Portlanders of the Apocalypse Red Rider woodblock prin by Raineysmith
Boombox played the only Yes song I can stand - linocut letterpress print by snowowl
Free ride to sydney by feedesignstore
If you can imagine/dream Letterpress Prints (set of 2) by hijirik
Burmilla cat original linocut print by rubyvictoria
Out of Africa On Fibrous Stock by ipullprints
AERIAL VIEW 3 - Solar Plate Etching by claudiahershman
Armadillo (Walking, Rolled) by TwoSarahs
Hand pulled linocut - Melancholic school girl ACEO - Grammar by YacsPocket
Houses and homes print by pinestreetmakery
Little Head Porgy 1 - Hand-Pulled Monotype by bonniemurrayart
Owl Gocco Print Set No. 3 - Four handprinted Owls by kerrybeary
BENT TREE photo etching pencil signed and numbered by printsnat
Limited Edition Print - Magenta and Green Blue Turquoise - 5 x 7 inches by strawberrypeople
Happiness is a big love - Limited Edition screen print by lisastubbs
But the Fruit (Original Color Reductive Woodblock) by kristenfrancis

Thanks everyone for continuing to use the "Printsy" tag so that I can find you for our "Who's Printsy". Looking forward to next week - keep 'em comin'!

Printsy Interview - Dee Beale

Etsy - www.deebeale.etsy.com
Web - deebeale.blogspot.com
Flickr - flickr.com/photos/deebeale/

Brief Bio
I’m a print maker/designer living in the UK with my husband and 2 small children, after studying graphic design and illustration I worked in Design agencies for over 10 years. 4 years ago I left full time employment to look after my 2 small children. I started print making and selling my prints on Etsy earlier this year.

How did you get started in printmaking?
Like most art students I was introduced to print making at Art College, although I thoroughly enjoyed it I couldn’t see it as a career path so went on to study Graphic Design and Illustration. After my second child looking to become more focused on illustration I came across some beautiful Letterpress work online I also started to read blogs and found Gocco. I acquired a Gocco in 2008 and started to experiment with it. I started print making and selling my prints on Etsy earlier this year.

Describe where you work.
At the moment I work at a table in a corner of one of the rooms in my house and all printing is done on the kitchen table.


Describe your work.
Graphic and bold.

What is your favourite printmaking process?
At the moment Gocco, but I’m hoping to try more printing processes in the near future.


What's your creative process for any given print?
I usually start by taking my own photographs and work from these, I always start sketching in my sketch book first and from my sketches I create a finished drawing, some times I print from this and other times, if I want a more graphic look I’ll scan this in and create a drawing in Adobe Illustrator and print from that.

What do you enjoy most about printmaking?
Pulling the first print off a new master screen.


What's your least favourite part of the process?
Lack of space, I live and work in a relatively small house and constantly have to move stuff around when printing.

What are your inspirations (other artists, people, places, events, etc.)?
That’s a tricky one because there are just so many, I love mid century art and design so a lot of the artists I admire are from that period including Lucienne Day, Jessie Tait, John Clappison, and Stig Lindberg but I could go on and on.


How has your work changed and evolved since you started?
Ask me in a few more years.

How do you get past creative slumps?
I think with information being so accessible these days it’s difficult not to be inspired by something, but if I do I find taking a break and getting on with other day to day stuff helps me refocus.


How do you promote your work?
I use my blog, flickr and twitter at the moment. I’ve also been lucky enough to have had my work featured on some of the Design blogs which is always really successful.

Any other comments or advice for others who want to try making hand-pulled prints?
Try some part-time courses or print workshops they’ll supply you with the equipment, checkout some of the great Print maker blogs online. The great thing about print making is it’s so accessible.

Sunday, September 13, 2009

Printsy Interview - Diana Moll


Blog: theqipapapers.blogspot.com
Etsy: www.qipapers.etsy.com

Brief Bio
I've been interested in art since I was small. this alarmed my parents, who really didn't know what to make of it since they were science oriented and so were my brothers. I looked at school as an opportunity to draw, not necessarily a place to learn math. A few times I got in trouble for drawing.


When I first went to college I thought I would be a pre-vet major since I spent much of my life with animals, but in less than a year I dropped out and went backpacking in Europe with a friend for 6 months. On my return I tried to get into the Art Department, you had to petition, and I didn't get in. Now I can see why, but then I was devastated.

I started doing an Independent Major in Illustration and took full year of letterpress printing and started getting hooked on printing. A Life Drawing class got me drawing a bit better and my petition for the Art Major was accepted. I spent lots of time in the Lithography studio inhaling fumes and making prints of toads and lizards. After graduation I did some graphic design and illustration along with various odd jobs. I bottled wine, was an assistant to a composer, DJ'd in a club, worked for years in record stores (when there were records LOL), that sort of thing. I wish Etsy had been around!


Graphics started getting more and computer oriented and I didn't like working on the computer so I went back to school and drew my way through a Masters of Traditional Chinese Medicine degree from Five Branches Institute. Along the way I got married and had a son, got divorced, got involved in Marital Arts (Tai Chi and Ba Gua). A few years ago the alternative medicine business started to get thin so I started teaching art at my son's school. I got hired at the now defunct Santa Cruz Waldorf High School and I started doing more art work because teaching can be very stimulating that way. So here I am, my son is off to college, I have two rabbits, an insomniac boyfriend, and lots of prints that want to be created........


How did you get started in printmaking?
I semi-concentrated in printmaking in college, mostly lithography and letter press. I loved it, but got really burnt out with the chemicals and it just wasn't the sort of thing you could do without a proper studio. That was decades ago. Last year the High School I worked for asked me if I'd teach a relief printing class this year. I hadn't printed in such a long time, then I saw Moku Hanga taught by April Vollmer being offered as a weekend course at the Community College and figured it would be interesting and good way to get back into it. I really liked her work, so I signed up. I fell in love with the Moku Hanga, no really, it was the same feeling.

Describe where you work.
I have a desk in the corner of the bedroom, there's no window, but I have a full spectrum light. Moku Hanga is very adaptable to small spaces!


What's your favourite printmaking process?
I like them all equally for different reasons. By the time I'm satiated with one it's time for the next and it feels like a fresh start. The variety of activities offered by Moku Hanga quite agrees with my need for change.

What's your creative process for any given print? (eg. sketch first? Pre-planned or free-form?)
The initial stimulus can be different. Like for 2 From Nottingham that was a commission and I did a sketch or two then looked at a lot of pictures of my subjects and revised my drawing a few times. For Toad's Eye View I wanted to do a print that used gold leaf and my new tool designed to make circles. In general things start as little sketches, then I'll see different aspects or things I want to try during the day while I'll doing other things.


What do you enjoy most about printmaking?
Seeing lots of fresh prints lined up is so exhilarating. Also printing the block that starts to pull everything together. It can be surprising which one this is, it's not always the key line, sometimes it's a color.

What's your least favorite part of the process?
Clean-up, I work in a small space and every time I start the next step I have to clean and straighten everything, just to have enough room to work.


How has your work changed and evolved since you started?
I've gotten more complex, trying to get some different sorts of textures. Of course I've actually only been doing this sort of printing for less than a year.....

How do you get past creative slumps?
Work in the garden, play with the rabbits. Get some rest, have acupuncture, get the energy back up and harmonized. It's all about Qi and balance.


How do you promote your work?
My Blog, donations, local crafts fair (well one so far and that was a disaster LOL).

Any other comments or advice for others who want to try making hand-pulled prints?
Go make some prints, spread some art. In this age of the digital it is so important to have some things made with hands.