Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Linoleum Collographs

Printmaking with our Linographs:


- ink linos up
- when spreading the paint onto the roller, paint should have a tacky sound, with an even layer of printing ink and surface of the linoleum
- the first 2 prints are exploratory
- remember to pay attention to the edges while placing paint onto the lino
- a painting station has been set up where students can take their paints to the station to paint their linos, and then bring them back to their seats to make the prints

Need to:
- make 4 sets of prints to play with (side by side, in a line by 4s, different configurations, overprints, etc.)
- see what kinds of extensions begin to form
- remember to get bits off of the linoleum
- pinkys help to guide the linos for an overlay or side by side prints
- do one print to start and see if you need to do other kinds of things to it.

Problems I ran into:
- the paint wouldn't come out thick enough the first couple of times because the linos wouldn't absorb the ink and print onto the paper
- had to try multiple times for the lino to absorb the ink






Thursday, November 19, 2009

Linograph



Today, we took a window and a piece of the collograph that seemed interesting. We then decided how big we want the linograph to be. Conceptually, we were creating an interesting discovery and moving forward with it.






- Took a pencil, freely marking the surface of the linograph, indicating the ideas of our square.
Things to keep in mind:
- negotiate your way through the surface
- linograph is an acquired art
- surface of the lino is shiny, skiddy, and plasticy
- lino tool: fits in the palm of the hand so it's comfortable cutting through and continuous pressure to help keep cutting
- practice to get the angle right, taking out a line of the linoleum
- be careful of it skidding and cutting hand
- the hand that you don't use keep out of the line of the hand that you do use
- tough to use when cutting but keep practicing



Practiced lino cuts:


Practiced Product:


Lino cut from my sectioned collograph:

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Printmaking from our collographs

Materials: Rollers, Tray, Plate, Paint, Long Brown Paper to lay on the table



Getting paint on plate:
1. Put dab of paint on tray
2. Roll roller into paint, back and forth gently by not spreading it too thin and apart
3. Aim for a pad of paint in the width and length of a roller
- you need to have tacky surface, without lump, flat bed of paint that's even on the roller

Now onto the collograph:
4. Put roller slowly over the plate or you can pick up the objects off the plate. Ink will dry within ten minutes so you need to work fairly quickly
5. Put paper over it and very carefully print what is underneath with your hands. The first print absorbs the ink and the second print will most likely create a better print. Make sure to pay attention to the ends and edges by pressing hard.


Now:
6. Choose one color and make three to four prints each with the same color
7. Then, ink over again, swapping with another person's color and do an overprint of the original or make a side by side print in order to create one large print.


Students' works:




When you think about objects to print, build a repertoire and think about which kind of materials to give that may be easier or harder to work with.
- What materials would you give to older or younger kids?
- Spongier brayer is easier to use.
- 4 prints in one color allows them to see what you have and play with those. How much paint is used? How many different ways can we turn the plate around and create a new design?
- There are many choices to explore, giving many options but pacing those options

Clean-up Time
-
You should allow at least 5-15 minutes of buffer time for cleanup.
- Divide up tasks to students and create a rotation
- Set up table with certain color and have students bring plates to roll color and bring the plates back to their own seats to do the transfer
- Consider what age this is appropriate for
- Provide materials for them and narrow choices down

Friday, November 6, 2009

Response to what we have already done...

1. Choose a section of my drawing and frame it.
2. Looking at collograph, construct on the board, a design that builds on ground plan that distills design. Think about relationship of patterns, textures and surfaces that may be part of collograph. (Opening shape rather than filling it up.)
- Collograph: plate using a board to construct a collage, based on forms from drawing.
- Materials used are significant in that the feel and touch of certain materials. Deliver the design and image of the drawing.









-What made me choose the part of the drawing that I chose? From playing, I found the section interesting...
-At what point did it start to become itself? When I saw the fabric with the cross hatches, I felt like it depicted the feel of the drawing.

References: Kurt Schwitters

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Potato Project


Characteristics of Potato:
Inside: wet, slimy, bumpy, edge is harder, nicer movement, dryer
- transform potato and surface of piece of paper
- look at relationship between the thickness of the piece of paper and pain on potato
Now...
1. Cover surface of potato with paint (chose green)

2. Print surface of paper with potato
3. Overprint with different color with same potato (chose blue)

4. Again overprint either in between or overlap (chose yellow)
5. Keep printing

- didn't come out as a whole potato print because of inconsistent ridges in the sweet potato

Why this way?
- starting with one color, you have an understanding of the pattern of potato
- explore overlapping, you get understanding of nuances and amount of paint affecting texture on piece of paper
- relationship between thickness of paint and potato
- this method slows students down
- slowing down is a by product and incentive of the project

Texture and Surface
Now invent ways of using potato in a transforming surface:
1. work with issue of density. How can you explore this?
2. work with issue of balance and the amount of paper you do and don't cover.
3. work with different exercises in transforming paper with potato

What did we learn? Keep control of where we want to go?
- Aesthetic control: how much paint and how much space on paper we would liek to use
- Challenges: play with the paper, experiment and play by making things interesting
What comes out of it?
- For children, we are talking more about content
- Balance and Density are artistic concepts learned as a set of conventions which can be explored in many ways.
- You can take a simple object and play with it to create boundless art
- What kind of patterns can be created?
- Choose which one to cut up and which one to keep
- As teachers, we need to let our students go

Other alternatives to potato: You can use the end of the carrot,cut more pieces of potato- anything that has texture

Friday, October 23, 2009

Drawing for Movement

So far, we have been experimenting with materials and now that we are drawing, these seems to be confusion about our new project: in and on the paper
- there may be confusion because of the constancy in trying to get rid of conventions and going back to just drawing.
- by feeling and sitting the paper, a feeling of being in the paper is experienced. (embodied knowing)
- if you're going to draw something, use your senses in order to have discussion about it.- "a feel for something."
- a movement comes in, through, out the body and into the drama. (moves and gathers something out from itself.)

How do you keep your drawing alive?
- focus on the line. What does it tell you? Des it tell you to stop or go on? There's a subtlety to it.
- on vs. in the paper...

Now...
Create a drawing. At the end, it should have a feel of the object that you started with. How do you preserve the quality of the drawing without presenting the drawing.
Lines: In and Out of surface, own integrity and preservation that doesn't have to refer itself ouside directly but has a feel of where it began.
- Take drawing back into the body from object itself. (Dancers do this very well..where motions of dropping into the paper is manifested.)
- Ask yourself: What kind of drawings do they need to be?
- Give a new birth to them. What needs to happen to these lines?
- What kind of movement does it make?

Some images made by classmates:








My piece:

Friday, October 16, 2009

What happens when you transform a milk carton?



Starting point: Milk carton, paper mache materials from previous week....



There are associations placed upon our work. The visuals put our mind to questions, asking us, "What do you think is going on here?" Let the material impose on you and talk to it without having your own agenda without impositions of your own ideas on the material. The goal should be to speak what it is that you want it to say. If you have a repertiore, then call upon it in a certain way. If we simply just look, we won't know what we're looking for so we need to have conversations with materials and its process because it gives us clearer explanations to our ideas. Sometimes, the classrooms may be the only place where students can carry such conversations and related issues. With the materials, we make meanings while having fun with it! Here are some works by classmates:



Next project: Draw a coexistent environment of the made object on and in the piece of paper. Afterward, tear it up into 3s-4s and combine it anyway you desire.