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Friday, October 9, 2015

EXTRA TEXTURE.

ITS PRINT GEEK OUT TIME.  Brace for a lot of technical mumbo jumbo about carving.

So I'm still very much in the depths of slogging it out on this new big block-the central panel from "Electric Baloneyland".  Im working on areas in the mid to lower sections of the image.  These areas are absolutely filled to the brim with medium grey values, which amounts to millions of little diamond shaped cross hatchings.  Cross hatching in woodcuts can be extremely difficult.  Thank god i have benchmarks in this regard.  Of course Albrecht Durer is the main inspiration for me.  However artists such as Hendrick Goltzius, Altdorfer, and of course Hans Burgkmair all were excellent at carving the cross hatching technique.  


TEXTURE
In my images i use texture to create value.  This is an especially important approach when working in a large format.  The reason for using texture to create value on a large scale is optimal for reasons of read-ability on the part of the audience.  By its nature a woodblock print's lines are rough, and the accumulation of single hatch and limited directional line can tend to create an overall effect of busy-ness and chaos, resulting in a slightly hard to read image.  This is especially true when working on a large scale.  When i first started doing block prints back in 1995, my images were drawn and carved using a simple system of single hatched lines.  These prints were around 2 feet by three feet.  Not exactly small, but nowhere near the scale i work on today.  It occurred to me that if i were to work bigger and just use simple directional line, things in the image might look really flat and not at all volumetric.  This effect would also look too busy in terms of marks.  So, I sought to use cross hatching, stippling, contour and cross contour lines to create texture which results in reading as gray scale shading.  As I noted earlier, woodcut lines are rough.  The accumulation of all those rough lines, when carved accurately, can have a uniquely fluid effect.  By its nature, the woodcut is an expressive medium.  The wood fights you.  God did not make trees for me to carve out hillbillies having sex in out houses with dogs and pirates.  The fact that the wood resists the carving is the fundamental reason why the German Expressionists favored woodcuts as a tool for their expression.  Woodcuts are an inherently expressive medium and for artists like Kollowitz and Kirchner it was a perfect fit for their emotionally charged imagery.  Basically, no matter how much of a vituoso the cutter of the block may be, the difficulty of carving always enhances the graphic emotion of the resulting image.  Just look at Durer's Apocalypse series, carved by HIM when he was in bios mid to late 20's.  (Yes, he carved those blocks kids, no matter what cracker jack art historians may try to tell you- and I have it on good authority!)  The Apocalypse series is just as expressive as anything in German Expressionist woodcuts.  There both two entirely different approaches to image making but the common factor is that they are woodcuts, hence the heightened expressiveness in both.

DRAWING

I draw my images without thinking about how in the hell I'm gonna carve them.  I trick myself into pretending that the drawing on the block is nothing more than a pen and ink drawing.  I use cross-hatching, single hatching, contour and cross contour lines to describe form.  Basicall, all the stuff they make you do in any beginning drawing class.  I lay out the composition and values first in a very loose gestural drawing on the block.  I then go on top of that loose drawing with sharpies, microns, and markers working towards a finished pen & ink drawing.  The textures that i use to describe shadow and make things look more dimensional are varied depending on the closeness of relative lines, and the overall accumulation of that spacial difference.  This varies greatly depending on the size of my image.  Smaller blocks that i draw on often have more simple & less complicated cross hatching.  The larger the image gets, the more texture you need to keep the image less flat looking.



CARVING
I draw and carve my blocks upright.  Its a great way to see the image as a whole and you are able to step back and assess the image compostionally as a whole.  I use Japanese wood gouges, working mostly in a "black-line" approach. (carving out the black lines).  I basically use the same approach to carving as my heroes, Durer and Hans Baldung.  The tools are different......but the effects are the same.  Tools for block carving back in the days of Durer were larger and more was done with a knife.  Woodcut artists of the middle ages prefered the fruit hardwoods for drawing, carving and printing.  The harder the wood, the more detail you can get.  Larger numbers of prints can be printed from a fruit hardwood block, because it wears down much slower.  An artist can carve across the grain on hard woods with minimal splintering.  Durer prefered cherry, apple or pear wood.  I use finish grade Birch plywood, 3/4 inch thick.  It's hard enough and tigh grained enough to hold detail with minimal splintering, but wont wreck your hands carving it.  If Durer would have had plywood......who knows what the hell we'd be talking about!  Durer carved from planks of wood, with the grain running long wise.  


OVERALL EFFECT
The tonal effects that I achieve are a combination of drawing and carving techniques.  When these carved lines are printed, the ink and pressure combined with the dampness of the paper creates a rough, fat, yet fluid line effect.  Overall, it is this part of the process that makes a woodcut a woodcut.  I like my images to be a little heavy on the black in terms of inking.  I use VERY STIFF INK. Yes, that was a commercial, kiddies. The right combination of pressure and ink along with the depth of my carving in the wood makes the tonal value from the cross hatching texture in my drawing possible.


Detail of "Bait", woodcut 2013

CARVING TOOLS

I Use a combination of Japanese wood gouges i bought from McClains in Seattle. They are some form of what i believe are called Hanga To.  In my set there is the standard V-Gouge, U-Gouge, a knife and a chisel.  I use a medium sized V gouge for almost all of my carving.  I strop the V gouge every day before i carve, on an old leather belt.  Also, i use hockey tape for a better grip on my tools. Check out McClains website here.



Ok, i feel that is enough print geek-ery for now.  Look for more on this blog real soon.  Ill be better about posting ALL THINGS EVIL PRINTS and the "ELECTRIC BALONEYLAND" project in the future.

WWW.EVILPRINTS.COM

Friday, April 3, 2015

"Electric Bologneland" & the NORTHERN INFLUENCE

IM BACK.  Hey, after many requests for me to start this thing up again.....here we go.   Ill try to be better about providing content and stuff, I promise.  So I've decided to not just focus on my print history influences here, but now I'm gonna just start writing about what I'm working on currently in the studio as well as the influences that go into it.

Which brings us to the big block I've just started carving.  It's the center panel from the next triptych from my "Booger Stew" series which is called "Electric Bologneland".  Its all about the loss of American innocence, and how we as a nation are culturally and morally bankrupt.  Its over kids.  Sorry.

Drawing on the center panel at Evil Prints, St. Louis, Mo. March 2015


This new block triptych is inspired by all those great flemish painters (Gerard David, Van Der weyden, Van Eyck etc.), a little bit of Frans Masereel, some Heironimus Bosch, and of course Durer.  As usual Durer is the major influence - this time specifically his Triumphal Arch of Maximmilian was THE big inspiration for me tackling such a huge print.  I like the idea of monuments on paper,  art pieces that have a function beyond just a window into another reality.  Durer's (and his assistants! see Altdorfer and Burgkmair) triumphant arch is perhaps one of the greatest prints of all time, a royal's budget compromise in terms of self promotion and stature.  Along with its triumphant procession, I've always been fascinated by the concept of works on paper that also function as objects.  The triumphant Arch of Maximillian is a perfect example.  Masterfully drawn and cut, it must have been the ultimate parlor piece as well as propaganda tool.



I also like sequenced stories that are told over multiple panels.  Visual narratives seem to work really well when told in 3 pieces.  Im sure there is an expert somewhere who can explain why that works so damn well.  So, altarpieces are the way to go, and I have always been heavily influenced by the artists of the Northern Renaissance when it comes to triptychs.   The best for my money was Roger Van Der Weyden (1399-1464) of Brussels.  Not Much is known about the guy but he was a total badass painter who influenced many printmakers most importantly Martin Schongauer, a big hero of mine.  Roger's works were large, dark, and elegant with the occasional flair for the violent.  Deep space is also a prominent visual tactic employed by him, and I've always ripped him off as well the other masters of the north. By the way Id be totally rude to not mention Max Beckman here.....he loved triptychs too and i LOVE him!


Having sifted through all these hero influences, Ive been planning this new triptych (Electric Bologneland) for about 3 years. I was working on it while finishing the last triptych "The Tommy Peeperz".  Ive now finished the drawing phase on the center panel and have started carving.  This thing is a monster, literally and figuratively. (Is that the right usage?)  Mermaids and Nazis in a noodling competition at the county fair.  Yeehaw!  Heres a peek at the drawing and some carving of a pile of fish.  Its stained red so I can see it-just so you know.   The block will probably take about 5 more months of carving every day to complete.  I will certainly provide you with updates of the daily struggles! Stay tuned.......... I gotta get back to carving the bastard.