Monday, April 27, 2009

Printsy Interview - Helen Gotlib


Name: Helen Gotlib
Etsy: www.helengotlib.etsy.com
Website: www.helengotlib.com

Brief Bio
Helen Gotlib was born and raised in Ann Arbor, Michigan.

In college, Gotlib divided her time between printmaking and scientific illustration. Her experience in scientific illustration helped her develop her ability to produce very detailed work. Her interest in printmaking evolved as she studied many different methods including lithography, intaglio, and wood block printmaking with water-based inks.


Gotlib has traveled extensively. Her observations of people and customs in Japan, China and Israel have influenced her perception of the human body and how expressive it is. Her life drawings reflect what people can express with isolated parts of their bodies.

Gotlib’s work has been exhibited in numerous juried shows across the country.

How did you get started in printmaking?
Well I remember it was my second semester in art school and I really wanted to take figure drawing but the class was totally full and the only thing that was left at my registration time was an intro to intaglio class. I was kind of mad at the time because I could not do figure drawing but after just one class of printmaking I became totally obsessed with it!(I started skipping all my other classes just to be in the PM studio!)

Describe where you work.
I work in my little studio in Ann Arbor, MI. My boyfriend and I have a 2 bedroom house and the whole first floor is devoted to our art studios for printmaking, drawing and painting. We always have a bazillion projects going on and not enough space!!! I bought my first etching press about 3 years ago now and I love it!(It’s the main sculpture in our house!)It’s no name brand I did not have $10,000 to buy anything too fancy. An auto mechanic in Canada built this press.


What's your favorite printmaking process?
Intaglio hands down! But I have been thinking about combining woodblock and intaglio together lately. I love seeing prints that have so many layers that I can’t figure out how the artist go to the end result.

What's your creative process for any given print? (eg. sketch first? Pre-planned or free-form?)
I go about my print making 2 different ways sometimes for the smaller nudes I have been listing I put some hard ground on to my plate and just take them to figure drawing sessions and draw right into them with a needle point. I really like the spontaneous line I can get when I work that way. The second way is much more premeditated. I copy a image I have already drawn then transfer it by tracing the main lines in to soft ground and go from there.


What do you enjoy most about printmaking?
Happy mistakes.

What's your least favorite part of the process?
Printing with white or silver ink!(I’m still trying to figure that one out…)

What are your inspirations (other artists, people, places, events, etc.)?
Other Artist - Takeshi Takahara, Koichi Yamamoto, Dylan Strzynski, Katherine Luchs, Kathie Kollwitz, Justin Palermo, and many more.

The changing of the seasons also is a big inspiration for some of my more recent works. and the human form.


How has your work changed and evolved since you started?
I don’t draw stick figures as much any more.

How do you get past creative slumps?
Walk away from a project and take a break! Also I think it helps that I kind of have built in brake because I travel a lot to show my work.


How do you promote your work?
Mainly by traveling around the country and doing the Art Fair circuit here in the US. I do about 10 shows a year.

I also enter some juried gallery exhibitions from time to time.

Oh and a few magazine competitions as well!

Really I figure anyway you can get people to see your work is good! And I always have business cards on me so I can direct people to my website.


Any other comments or advice for others who want to try making hand-pulled prints?
Try taking a class at your local collage or applying to an artist in residency some were that has lots of equipment for you to play around on and experiment with before picking one medium! For any one on the west coast or wanting to go there I highly recommend the KALA Art Institute. It’s a HUGE printmaking studio located in Berkeley, CA. In the old Heinz ketchup factory! A must see for printmakers!
Happy printing!

Monday, April 20, 2009

Printsy Interview - Patricia Phare-Camp

'Noras Daffodils II' - ppharecamp on Flickr
Patricia (Patti) Phare-Camp

Website: imp-s.com
Etsy: pharecamp.etsy.com
Blog: phare-camp.blogspot.com
AbsoluteArts: absolutearts.com/pharecamp
Flickr: flickr.com/photos/pharecamp

Brief Bio
A second-generation artist, Patti Phare-Camp holds a B.A. in Fine Arts from California State University, Sacramento, and is an MFA candidate at the Academy of Art University in San Francisco. Patricia is an accomplished print maker whose work has been featured in 18 exhibitions and is featured in the print collection at the Spencer Museum of Art in Lawrenceville Kansas and the Solano Community College Library in Solano California.

How did you get started in printmaking?
It all started with a printmaking survey class at El Camino Community College in Gardenia California. I started out as a painting major and had to take a printmaking survey for my fine arts degree. The etching was fun, the litho was fun but the moment I touched knife to wood I forgot all about painting...although I've recently taken up painting again woodcut printmaking is my greatest love!

Describe where you work.
See this is the beauty of woodcut printmaking...there is nearly no place that you can't work! Before 9/11 I would carve plates where ever I went. The only place now that I can't take my knives is a commercial airplane.

My husband recently enclosed about 85% of our 18x20' back deck, the other 15% has shades that can be drawn to keep weather at bay. He did this so I could work out there. Its awesome, I'm protected by the elements yet it still feels like I'm outdoors. Hubby also hooked up cable tv and the internet so I can listen to cable radio while working or surf the web to find reference material. The only drawback is that in the winter it doesn't get warm enough to work with oil based inks. In that case I work in the kitchen. The counters are just the right height to mix and roll ink. It's also perfect for hand burnishing.

'Abstract 32007' - ppharecamp on Flickr
Lately I like to sit on the deck or on the living room couch to carve my plates while I listen to classic movies on the classic movie channels. I take my printmaking materials into public venues all the time. People love public demonstrations of woodcut printmaking and I love educating people about the arts and how much work is involved in the making of art.

What's your favorite printmaking process?
Woodcut!

What's your creative process for any given print? (eg. sketch first? Pre-planned or free-form?)
I've worked free-form, carving willy nilly into a chunk of wood, but usually I get a vision, sketch it then transfer the sketch to wood, carve and then print. Lately I've been using the computer to do a lot of design work.

'Priestess 1' - ppharecamp on Flickr
My thesis project for my master's degree is a series of woodcuts. I'm recreating the Major Arcana of a tarot deck (the first 22 cards) in woodcut. I'm using an archetype from my Chicano culture, the skeleton, to represent the archetypes in the classic European decks. The process I'm using for this project starts with research into the meanings of the individual cards. I then study the images in various decks and research the psychological symbolism behind them. The I sit in front of the computer and research images of archetypal symbolism to use for collaging. After I've accumulated a plethora of digital images I cut and paste elements from them into a digital sketch of the card design. I then print out the design, trace and transfer to a piece of all Shina plywood; a Japanese poplar-like plywood manufactured specifically for woodcut printing. I carve the "Keyline" block; the line elements of the block print. I print several keylines to Mylar and transfer from the Mylar to more blocks. I carve those block into color fields, making a block for each color I will use. I then roll the blocks with water soluble relief inks and roll up my prints.

What do you enjoy most about printmaking?
The thing I love most about about fine art prints is that they are the most democratic of the visual arts. Because the artist can produce multiples of the same image; hand produced fine art can be sold at affordable prices to the masses. Unfortunately in this country the masses are culturally ignorant and have no idea of what a print is. They are duped by those who would mistakenly call giclees and offset posters fine art prints.

'Empress Black' - ppharecamp on Flickr
I enjoy the process of woodblock the most. Every step of it from the vision to the carving to the tearing of paper to the mixing of inks to the rolling to the burnishing and then the amazement of pulling that sheet of paper away from the last block to see yet one more successful work of art -- and gasp "did I do that?!?"

What's your least favorite part of the process?
CLEAN UP!

What are your inspirations (other artists, people, places, events, etc.)?
Barenforum.org is one the most influential forums for relief printers I have had the privilege of participation in. In this internet forum relief printers of all levels of expertise and from all corners of the earth communicate, guide, encourage and inspire each other in the making of art. It is the one place where beginners can communicate with and get advice from forerunners in traditional techniques and new media!

How has your work changed and evolved since you started?
I started out doing black line woodcuts. I progressed into working with multi-color blocks. I've tried my hand at the Japanese hanga technique. But truth is I still love the black and white high contrast print the best. And lately I've been getting back into using the cutmarks as an element in the compositions.

'TroubleBuster' - ppharecamp on Flickr
You know when we first start out in woodcut printing we strive toward cleaner and cleaner line work, forgetting about the drama that the cutmarks impart to the print. Then as we become mature printmakers we return to shear delighting in the accidental cut mark that imparts that one special spark to what would have been a so-so print without it...

How do you get past creative slumps?
I have a series of work I call my Zen series. I splattered India inks onto 18x24" sheets of paper then cut the paper up into 0.5x1" and 1x2" and 1.5x1.5" rectangles. I then put the pieces into jars, one for black and white pieces and one for multicolor pieces. If I'm feeling creatively void I simply draw a few pieces out of a jar, select the one with the strongest composition then do a blown up painting (over 30" in width) or a woodcut or both of that little bit...I call it a zen series because the image is created by the universe. Anyway this usually frees my mind to receive inspiration.

'Big Ass Spyder' - ppharecamp on Flickr
Also I participate at least once a year in a Barenforum.org print exchange. Several times a year members of Barenforum will exchange prints within a theme and paper size with each other. Committing to an exchange with others forces me to think of imagery in the theme and complete an edition of prints within a deadline.

How do you promote your work?
Unfortunately very poorly these days...I am so preoccupied lately with my master's thesis project that I have very little time to devote to self promotion. I do blog regarding my thesis project and other artmaking ventures and have found that it's gotten a bit of a following. Despite the blog's following I've seen very few sales from it. Occasionally I will do an ebay challenge but I've only seen a few sales with that and at ridiculously low return so I've given up on ebay.

'A Well Traveled Man II' - ppharecamp on Flickr
Any other comments or advice for others who want to try making hand-pulled prints?
If you've never done printing sign up for a class at a local community college or community center. Or google or go to Barenforum.org to learn about techniques. It's easy and GASP - you don't even really have to know how to draw (though it helps) You can get by with very little monetary investment into the making of fine art prints; you can make monotypes and etchings from the abominable plastic blisterpacks that en wrap nearly every thing we buy... You can make white line relief prints from Styrofoam meat trays or silkscreens from stencils cut into cereal boxes... You can print on beautiful hand made paper or on old newspapers... and you can print with fancy expensive inks or with inexpensive acrylic paints straight from the tube... and you can use expensive fancy rubber brayers roll up your inks and ball baring barens to burnish your prints or you can roll ink with cheap foam edger rollers from home depot and burnish with a wooden spoon from the dollar store...

Printmaking does not have to be fussy and it is soooooo much addictive fun! It has application for so many other projects -- Once you've started printmaking it is virtually impossible to avoid branching out into the inevitable printmaking sidetracks: greeting cards, handmade books, patterning of textiles...

The important thing is to allow yourself to have a good time making.

Who's Printsy This Week

Fatty Falling by CaptainFishBeard
Pug, Original Painting/Monotype by frettke
Getting Lost - Los Angeles - Screen Print by miriamdema
They Sailed Away - original linocut by bluecicada
Water Tower Linocut by loadedhipspress
Arion (woodcut) by VizArt
Blast Off - serigraph art print by withremote
pat the dog hand pulled linocut by littlebirdesigns
Winter Tree Pattern (Original Gelatin Monotype) by edamamepress
Tossed About relief print by boundstaffpress

Saturday, April 11, 2009

Printsy Interview - Jennifer Schmitt

'red moon chine colle' - azuregrackle on Flickr
Website: www.azuregrackle.com
Etsy: www.azuregrackle.etsy.com
Flickr: www.flickr.com/photos/azuregrackle/

Brief Bio
Born and raised in Massachusetts with a few years' detour in Pennsylvania.

How did you get started in printmaking?
MLee of Etsy had a small workshop at her home, I went and was hooked.

Describe where you work.
I have a baby press (can handle blocks up to 10" x 14") and most of my supplies in the dining area of my apartment. But really my whole apartment is full of art supplies. I have the table that was our breakfast table as a kid and I use that as my work space once I clear off all the mail and books. Yes, it's a multi-use space.

What's your favourite printmaking process?
Hmmmm, I love learning new ones. On Etsy I am primarily a woodcut artist, but I am beginning to shift to solar plates and monoprints, mix in chine collé and mixed media details. I love that you can mix different printmaking techniques to spectacular effect.

'red rocks - azuregrackle on Flickr
What's your creative process for any given print? (eg. sketch first? Pre-planned or free-form?)
I work fairly free-form overall. I plan my blocks before I carve them, but the printing is more intuitive. When I work, I spread out half done prints from previous printing sessions. Then I stare at them all until I get an idea of what would be a good next layer or next color to add on. Some prints get all their layers in one day, some take months until I come up with the right combination. I have a stack of about 50 half done prints right now.

What do you enjoy most about printmaking?
The "ooooooo" moment when you pull the print from the block. You never know exactly what you'll get. It's like a little surprise every time.

'jungle by night' - azuregrackle on Flickr
I also love that there's so much to learn and try and play with. I'm addicted to beautiful papers too. Mmmmm, gampi.

What's your least favorite part of the process?
Clean-up. That and when the process calls for me to be very precise. I want to rush through the steps and it all becomes a big mess. I'm not patient that way.

What are your inspirations (other artists, people, places, events, etc.)?
Michael Mazur is a huge inspiration in terms of technique and talent. There are so many local artists I admire too - Liz Chalfin and Lousie Kohrman of Zea Mays Studios. Annie Bissett's ability to make political statements and stay true to her art.

'veins' - azuregrackle on FlickrFor subject matter, I am inspired by nature, the poetry of Mary Oliver, colonial New England headstones (my town is covered with them and they are carved art pieces too), old family stories, women's traditional crafts being elevated and recognized as true art forms.

How has your work changed and evolved since you started?
I continue to challenge myself and take classes. I started a figure drawing class because I want to be able to include people in my work and I didn't feel like I could draw the human form the way I wanted to. I compose images more thoughtfully, leaving less to luck, while at the same time I try not to think too much and kill the spontaneity of the process. I think the overall change has been in my confidence and desires to work bigger and with more different techniques.

'turtle egg' - azuregrackle on Flickr
How do you get past creative slumps?
Sometimes I work anyway. I keep posted on my wall the quote "Inspiration happens during work, not before it." Other times I sit back and let myself rest. I have to recharge sometimes and take time to see what new ideas bubble up.

How do you promote your work?
I use Etsy and my website and flickr. I have done a bunch of craft shows where I have a mailing list sign-up and then will send out postcards to past customers of where I'll be next.

'leaves and squares' - azuregrackle on Flickr
Any other comments or advice for others who want to try making hand-pulled prints?
Try whatever method speaks to you. It's so much fun!

Thanks for the interview, Jenn!

PS - for those of you who didn't know, Jennifer was the organizer extraordinaire of the amazing and incredible collaborative work, The Periodic Table Printmaking Project.

Who's Printsy This Week

Noras Daffodils II - original silkscreen print by PhareCamp
Two Australian Crows, Etching by bridgetfarmerprints
Kingfishers, Original Linocut by fiveinthemorninglino
Fanatic linocut relief print original art by HeftArt
Henri's Amoeba - original woodcut print by AzureGrackle
Baby Robin by dakokichidekalb
Googly-Eyed Glass Squid and Rubber Friends by jpopstudios
writing paper and envelopes - lapwing original linocuts by jesslovell
Upper St Giles Street - original wood engraving by spoonergregory
Landscape - Original Monotype No 2 by flyingmonkeystudio