Another small wood engraving on Boxwood printed on Boxing Day.
Stoat
Wood Engraving
51mm x 54mm
Edition of 20
My work is representational and naturalistic. I go for a walk with a sketchbook and make drawings of anything that interests me. Then back home in the studio I use the sketches to try and make the best print that I possiby can.
"The artist is also a born adventurer. His explorations, unlike those of the tourist, are rewarded by the discovery of beauty spots unmentioned in the guide books, and with tireless curiosity and an exceptional proneness to wonderment, he will come upon objects of remarkable interest overlooked or even shunned by more disciplined observers."Augustus John, R.A.
Another small wood engraving on Boxwood printed on Boxing Day.
Stoat
Wood Engraving
51mm x 54mm
Edition of 20
The mezzotint plate that I have been working on for the last couple of months is now ready to edition. However, due to a small stock control issue I've none of the Fabriano Rosapina paper that I use for the mezzotints. So whilst waiting for the order to arrive I engraved and printed this little wood engraving instead. Based on some sketches made back in March of one of a group of 4 deer feeding along the edge of a field close to my home.
Printed with Hawthorn Printmakers Dense Black Ink on 145gsm Zerkall Smooth paper.
This week I've started work on a new mezzotint working on a plate 150mm x 200mm. My starting point is this pencil drawing of an old pathway dappled by shadows. Should work well as a mezzotint I think. I'd laid the ground on the copper plate months ago and then put it to one side. I couldn't at the time, come up with an image that I was confident would work well and justify the amount of time I would need to spend working on it.
It's been a bit of a frustrating month since our summer holiday. I've made two attempts at a linocut of the lighthouse at Spurn Head and both attempts have ended up in the bin. The first abandoned after about 5 colours and the second after two colour passes. I'll return to the subject and give it another go as there is definitely a print there but I need a couple of months distance, to come back to it with fresh eyes.
So in the meantime I've been playing around with my sample endgrain wood blocks and engraved a couple of little prints.
Towards Bacton ChurchEarlier this year I made some engravings on Resingrave, a substitute matrix for wood engravings. I wasn't really satisfied with the surface and found it difficult to work, so I ordered a practice pack of assorted end grain blocks from Chris Daunt. Over the last few weeks I have been slowly working through the various blocks with some positive results. There is still much to learn and my mark making is still a little crude, the medium demands a much more delicate touch than cutting the lino that I am more used to. It does however fit well with my mezzotint work. Although producing totally different looking images both methods require the same mindset in working. Essentially with both methods you are drawing with light rather than trying to build up the darks in the image. Both an untouched endgrain block and a freshly prepared mezzotint plate print as black. Any work done on them creates the light areas in the image.
So these are the results so far:
Just back from a week in Norfolk, although a family holiday I did manage to get a few sketches done for future reference.
Happisburgh Lighthouse - Watercolour