There have been a few distractions and deadlines taking me out of the studio lately. In fact, I've just returned from a couple of days away in New Hampshire and Massachusetts... in part to attend the opening of the Rockport Art Association & Museum National exhibition. It's my first time applying to this show, and I was delighted to have a piece selected. Good friends and colleagues James Coe and Cindy House also have (award winning!) work in the show, so going to the opening gala was an opportunity to both check out a new (to me) venue and to see my peeps.
But I'm home again and back to work, trying to wrap up the current linocut in progress. I'm further along now than this post will show, but not quite finished. IRL (In Real Life) I am at the Hard to Remain Patient stage. I have only the details of the bird to print, but the layers that have already been printed are still a bit too wet to add another. I tried to print today... but made a mess with wet rejection and had to just stop and clean up for the day.
SO let's back up to what was happening before I left for the NH/MA adventure.
Apparently there were some gremlins that got into the studio and destroyed some documentation while I was away... because the next photo in my camera looked all kinds of different, but I didn't have any shots of either the inked block or my rollups. It appears that I might have printed both a darker blue across the entire block and then a gray along just the bottom 1/4 of the image. Or maybe someone else did it when I wasn't looking. But here's the next progress shot that I have, so we will pretend it was Step 7 and move on.
I seem to have gotten back on track again after this, since I have a nice gray rollup to show you...
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Step 8 rollup |
You might notice that the bird doesn't have any ink on it. Because most of the material around the bird has now been carved away it wasn't too difficult to roll ink around it and I didn't need to mask it. If I accidentally got ink on the bird it was easy enough to wipe it with a rag before printing.
And now we are here:
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Step 8 - printed |
The color is looking quite rough here, but don't panic. Let's roll up Step 9.
Things started to get super tweaky at this stage. You can see that most of the material has been carved off the block now... certainly most of the water is gone.
But everything was feeling too blue and gray and I wanted to warm up a few reflections. I also wanted to lighten that foreground stone a little bit.
I mixed a crazy-bright-looking pumpkin color and spot inked the reflections in question. I also hit the top of the rock with a transparent white.
Masking the bird might not have been entirely necessary here, but I didn't want to risk the escape of any of that pumpkin-colored drama. I had some bird-shaped masks left over from previous stages so it was easy to just pop them in place.
And here's the result:
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Step 9 - printed |
The overall color looks slightly less alarming here, but this thing is turning out to be a challenge to photograph.
Let's take a look at one more color pass before we take a break.... perhaps the last one before we turn our attention to the bird. (Speaking of which... have you identified it yet? Eastern US peeps might struggle with it, but westerners should be able to sort it even in silhouette.)
So here's the Step 10 rollup:
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Step 10 - rollup |
Yes, it's a nice dark swirling its way down the remaining bits of lino surface. Once again I just wiped stray ink out of the bird shape rather than use a mask.
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Step 10 printed |
I really hoped to be done with all the water and rocks at this stage, but felt like it needed just a wee bit more oomph. I did a bit more carving and then hit the whole thing again with the same dark ink.
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Step 11 printed |
Yes, okay... even the camera thinks it feels a bit more balanced now and is taking slightly better photos. I think it's time to turn our attention to that bird and see if we can't wrap this thing up! Stay tuned.
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