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Showing posts with label IMPACT 12. Show all posts
Showing posts with label IMPACT 12. Show all posts

Friday, September 23, 2022

Last weekend of ‘The Printmaker’s Garden of Imagination’

 

A substantial part of the past week has been spent numbering, titling and signing freshly minted copies of The Heavens Declare (1) and (2) in readiness for the final days of the Goldfields Printmakers group exhibition, The Printmaker’s Garden of Imagination


Sold copies of the linocuts can be collected from the gallery at the end of the last day of the show, Sunday 25 September, or, unless other arrangements have been made, they will be posted to their new owners early next week.

The response to these prints, the first of a planned suite, has been hugely gratifying and encouraging. They will also form part of a future artist book. I’ve even received an advance order for it from a rare book collector. Fortunately he is in no rush!

The Printmaker’s Garden of Imagination
Newstead Arts Hub
8A Tivey Street, Newstead VIC 3642
Opening Hours: Sat and Sun 10am - 4pm

Meanwhile, on the other side of the world, The Printmakers’ Garden of Imagination can also be viewed at IMPACT 12, the International Printmaking Symposium in Bristol, UK. 

Photos 1-2 above: The Heavens Declare (1) and The Heavens Declare (2), each 2022, linocut, chine-collé, 20 x 15 cm (image), 42 x 29 cm (paper), ed: 30.

Wednesday, August 31, 2022

The Heavens Declare

The Heavens Declare (1), 2022, pictured top, is part of the forthcoming Goldfields Printmakers exhibition, The Printmakers’ Garden of Imagination. Like its sister work, The Heavens Declare (2), (see below) it takes a detail from The Heavens Declare… (c. 1910), a needlework by British Arts and Crafts artist and designer May Morris (1862-1938), as its point of departure. 

Both linocuts reflect on the formative years I spent in UK and on my home country of Australia - in this instance, my present home in the Victorian Goldfields city of Ballarat. This work also recalls the wild rose bushes still found on the goldfields that were originally planted by British colonists as sentimental reminders of their own home country.


The Heavens Declare (2), 2022, pictured abovereferences the introduction of orange trees to Australia. In 1788, orange seeds were brought over by Captain Arthur Phillip, the first Governor of New South Wales. Reverend Richard Johnson, Chaplain of the fledgling colony, subsequently planted a small orange grove in Bridge Street, Sydney. They were the first orange trees in Australia to bear fruit. 

Scroll down to my last post for further information about the show, including a list of participating artists.

Opening eventSaturday 3 September, 2.00 - 3.30 pm 

Newstead Arts Hub
8A Tivey Street, Newstead VIC 3642

Opening Hours: Sat and Sun 10am - 4pm

Current to 25 September.

The exhibition will run concurrently at IMPACT 12, the International Printmaking Conference in Bristol, UK.

Pictured top: The Heavens Declare (1), 2022, linocut, chine-collé, 20 x 15 cm (image), ed: 30.

Pictured second: The Heavens Declare (2), 2022, linocut, chine-collé, 20 x 15 cm (image), ed: 30.

Friday, August 26, 2022

The Printmakers’ Garden of Imagination


Deborah Klein, The Heavens Declare (2), 2022,  

Linocut, chine collé20 x 15 cm, Edition 1/30

You are cordially invited to

THE PRINTMAKERS’ GARDEN OF IMAGINATION 

An exhibition of prints by GOLDFIELDS PRINTMAKERS

at Newstead Arts Hub


Opening EventSat 3 September 2 - 3.30 pm



Participating Artists

Loris Button
Anne Langdon
James Pasakos
Dianne Longley
Barbara Semler
Marte Newcombe
Deborah Klein
Jan Palethorpe
Susan Clarke
Leonie Auhl
Robyn Gibson
Jackie Gorring
Marie Mason
Emma Stoneman
Penny Peckham

Diana Orinda Burns
Melissa Proposch
Catherine Pilgrim

Goldfields Printmakers, a collective of 25 printmakers based in the Victorian Goldfields region, was formed in 2012. To learn more about the group, visit our website HERE


Newstead Arts Hub

8A Tivey Street, Newstead VIC 3642

 Websitehttps://newsteadartshub.org/

Email: info@newsteadartshub.org

Opening HoursSat and Sun 10am - 4pm

The exhibition runs to 25 September.


The Printmakers’ Garden of Imagination will be exhibited concurrently at IMPACT 12, the International Printmaking Conference in Bristol, UK.

Monday, August 15, 2022

Another linocut for IMPACT 12

 

Hot off my little craft press: a proof of the second of two linocuts heading for IMPACT 12, the International Printmaking Conference in Bristol, UK, as part of a Goldfields Printmakers portfolio. 


The Poppy Crafts A4 die cutting and embossing machine doubles as an excellent press for smaller sized relief prints. (The work pictured here measures 20 x 15 cm). This craft press has the added benefit of adjustable pressure and is a pleasure to use, giving none of the grief I’ve experienced with printing linocuts on an etching press. 

Further updates on this and its sister work will be posted shortly. 

Wednesday, August 3, 2022

Work in Progress for IMPACT 12


Pictured above: a linocut ready for printing. Begun during my recent residency at Geelong Grammar School, the completed work will be part of a Goldfields Printmakers portfolio to be exhibited at IMPACT 12, the upcoming International Printmaking Conference in Bristol, UK. Would that I were travelling with it.

A couple of earlier progress views are below. 


Once the drawing is resolved and the block is ready to carve, I apply a coat of transparent ink to make it easier to see the areas that have been cut away.


Monday, June 6, 2022

Geelong Grammar School Residency - a final studio visit

   

My time in the Geelong Grammar School studio is now just a fond memory, albeit one that will linger on. In this post I step inside for one last visit, if only a virtual one, and hope you’ll join me.


During the residency my time was equally divided between painting and printmaking. I set up the printmaking table directly inside the the studio entrance and my painting table at the opposite end.
 

Second from the top, above left, and top left in the more detailed view below, is a previously carved block, part of Illustrated Women, an artist book in the making. My intention was to use this and other pre-carved blocks to demonstrate hand burnishing techniques to the students.

To its right is the first linocut design completed during the residency. Made for a major group exhibition and print exchange next year, the block is ready to begin cutting. In fact, I’d intended to complete the carving while I was here - until the Muse decided to pay me an unexpected visit.

In the foreground of the table are my three most recent works, shown in various stages of progress. None of these were previously planned. Progress views of the blocks centre and right were featured in my last post. They are intended for a collaborative exhibition, The Artist’s Garden, a Goldfields Printmakers project. In September 2022, two works from each of us will be exhibited in Bristol as part of IMPACT 12, a international print symposium held biennially in various parts of the world. The Artist’s Garden will also be exhibited in Australia (details to follow). Being exceedingly time poor, I’d initially declined to participate in the exhibition. But the Geelong residency gave me what I’d previously lacked: time and the headspace to recognise that there was indeed a place in my work - and my schedule - for it. Moreover, the two panels for IMPACT 12 have provided the impetus for an ongoing series that may also develop into an artist book. A third panel (foreground left) is currently in development and others will follow in due course.


Below: a detailed progress view of my work for next year’s print exchange and group exhibition. 


Everyone I met during the residency, from the Principal to the students to everyone else, was warm, welcoming and genuinely interested in what was unfolding in the studio. People of all ages stopped by to talk about the work.

I particularly enjoyed my sessions with the art school teachers and their students. Directly below is Gen, snapped on the last day of my residency. A student from her group was examining my Moth Woman Vigilantes lino blocks, made several years ago, when she noticed one one of them bore an uncanny resemblance to Gen.


Among the things I’ll miss most are the early morning chats with Lucy before classes began for the day. 


Working with her colleague Sharon, AKA Shaz (pictured below) was also a joy. 


Unfortunately I never got a photo with Peter Bajer, Head of Visual Arts, who I probably spent the most time with. What an extraordinarily kind, thoughtful and considerate host he was. I’ll really miss joining him for morning tea in the staff room and in the cathedral-like dining hall (affectionately referred to as “Hogwarts”) at lunchtime. Every day he would come to collect me, ensuring I took proper breaks. Peter and his wife Iga looked out for me throughout the residency, and were marvellous company - it’s mainly thanks to them that I was able to settle in so quickly. 

Early in the residency, Andrew Ryan took a series of photos for the school’s archives and has kindly sent them through to me. One of his portraits of me is now on the school website. You can see it HERE. It’s an honour to join the list of luminaries who have gone before me, and in August, my partner, Shane Jones, will be among them!

A small selection of Andrew’s photos are below. Also in the photos are are a delightful group of students from one of Lucy’s classes.







The sun may have set on my residency, but besides a swag of happy memories, there has been much to take away with me: new works, the promise of new directions, and a world of new beginnings.