Baren Digest Sunday, 12 November 2000 Volume 13 : Number 1212 ---------------------------------------------------------------------- From: Wanda Date: Sat, 11 Nov 2000 10:12:51 -0700 Subject: [Baren 12067] Re: Baren Digest V13 #1210 Lawrence wrote: > The beauty of a press is that you do > not need thick ink (which if you follow Ivans model, ie the history of > print being the history of removing muddy water from a deep ditch to a > situation where embossing and ink are to a minimum) then the press is > ideal. Still a spoon print on a small scale can be nice, say for wood > engraving. Could you tell us a little more about "Ivans model"? The image of a deep ditch of muddy water is pretty intriguing comparison. There are probably as many ways to put ink on paper as there are people who do it. My favorite way is dry paper (Arches 88) a bed-driven press (as opposed to a top roller press) a registration board made of matt board with an L built up of mat board to hold the block in place. A thin layer of ink with enough pressure to emboss a little bit will pick up very fine nuances of the carved lino block. For hanga printing, damp paper and a good baren make short work of the printing process. And the registration marks carved into the block itself. I enjoy both processes very much. My $.02... Wanda ------------------------------ From: "jerelee" Date: Sat, 11 Nov 2000 19:05:27 -0600 Subject: [Baren 12068] Re: paper charset="iso-8859-1" Dear Paper Junkies I just received a 160 page catalog from New York Central Art Supply. It lists thousands of different papers from around the world - , Japan,France, Italy, India, Bhutan, Africa, Germany, Thailand, Nepal, and Madagascar in addition to marbled and printed papers. Call them toll free at 1-800-950-6111 or email them at sales@nycentralart.com. jerelee----- ------------------------------ From: d bartl Date: Sat, 11 Nov 2000 17:45:52 -0800 (PST) Subject: [Baren 12070] Time to introduce myself Hi, I have been lurking in the background for a few weeks, reading messages and learning a lot about woodblock printing. I have an undergrad degree in fine art (1985) and have recently got back into woodblock printing, via white line printmaking technique. I was looking for information on the technique and in the course of a web search found your site. I also have worked as a professional photographer, paint in watercolors and oils, use colored pencil, in short I use whatever medium the subject seems to demand. Hope this is enough info, am looking forward to participating in a swap or exchange. Deborah Ann Bartl pennsylvania, USA ------------------------------ From: "Murilo Pereira" Date: Sun, 12 Nov 2000 00:09:11 -0200 Subject: [Baren 12071] Re: what's it all about Last week I was with the History teacher in his class - 14 to more than 50 - at night - and have had the insight that I don't know nothing at all about the african art, it seems like it doesn't exist anymore. So I made the bridge to Picasso's cubism that those classes have talked about in Art classes in which I had also being present as auxilary teacher, So I thinked " Cubism, and " Les demoiselles d"Avingnon" , they were his answer to the African sculptures he had seen in Paris, and have inspired other artists - Modigliani, ... . And for now we do'nt konw nothing about their prints, their paintings... I saw Afrincans in the soccer - Camar=F5es - but in Art it's just like they don't exist. In fact, all we know from them are in the american movies or it's about Nelson Mandella . (Why was he a prisioner for some time? ). Have to say that my knowledge about the African continent doesn't exist at all. I appreciate if any, - well, Barbara, here I would use any or some or none? - /Baren/ member owns their links . I must confess my baren is a wooden spoon and I have never seen a genuine Japanese baren. I'm still in the carven. Your enthusiasm makes me feel more faithfull for the future. Sometimes I think Art is dead. Or is it a Pomo reaction? Best wishes. Murilo Pereira ------------------------------ From: Lawrence Date: Sun, 12 Nov 2000 19:16:22 +1100 Subject: [Baren 12072] Re: Baren Digest V13 #1210 <200011110748.QAA20392@ml.asahi-net.or.jp> Hi Wanda William Ivans was an art theorist who put forward that the history of printing since Gutenberg has been "the history of removing a muddy stream from the bottom of a ravine", he is referring to thick ink and the embossing left by the press. (have a look for a book called "Prints and visual communications" MIT press London 1969 reprinted in 89). Ivans model is such that lithography is the be all and end all of print because it takes the printing process to its logical climax of least ink and embossing, his aesthetic taste is such that he sees that as a good thing. The arts crafts movement and private press movement in GB also ascribed largely to this model. I personally think that Ivans didn't forsee that there would come a time when people would appreciate the beauty of a page or image based on its tactile feel and its uniqueness. I once held a page of the Nuremberg chronicle (an early block printed book) and it was the most awesome thing to touch, really very tactually alive, felt as if it came from a totally different planet, whereas the private press books from the Victorian era by contrast seem to try really hard to disguise the fact that they were hand crafted (still gorgeous things though). I once handled a silkscreen that a chinese artist printer had done, it was easily a 1/2 cm of ink, more like an oil painting than a screenprint. It was really bizarre but stunning to look at and to touch. Artists when they use a medium don't have to be limited just by the visuals they create. What can be most marvellous in a print is to close your eyes and run your hands over the page, feel the paper, the type and the print, embossed it comes alive in the finger tips. Thats why I think that old technology is so worthwhile, because an offset litho or computer output is tactually very sterile. Not dismissing that these mediums can be invested with some soul, through the image laid upon them, but that the final creation is going to be tactually lifeless give or take a gimmick or two, such as raised inks or recycled carton board. I like what Ivans had to say however and can see the truth of it bourne out day to day in the commercial world. Offset work from a commercial printers is created with the same method (theoretically anyway) that an artist lithographer uses. Tactually this renders it a little lifeless (I'm not referring to content as this has its own life). Engravers, screenprinters, etchers and linoblock printers inevitably have a result which will be more tactile to the touch. In an age where there is less and less touch this can only be beneficial. Read a quote of Giacometti or Henry Moore once where they said a similar thing, I think that they said they thought that their work was only alive so long as people (physically) touched it, I went to the art gallery a week or so later and got told off for gromfondling a Henry Moore. Go figure... Another little rant for 2c... ------------------------------ End of Baren Digest V13 #1212 *****************************