Sunday, September 4, 2011

Karl Bang

"Karl Bang was born as Bong Ka in Shanghai in 1935."

I used to appreciate his art more... now the "pretty ladies"  bore me. They are just pretty, posing expressionlessly, frozen, and remind of dolls. The three last ones are better, though.
I do love the colors, the animals and such.






Saturday, September 3, 2011

Friday, September 2, 2011

"Grafiikka" - printmaking: monoprinting

Monotypes are done so that you create the artwork on a smooth surface, like a sheet of metal or glass, but also wood or paper is being used. Then you take a print from this. The second print is "ghost print" :-D
You don't create any permanent matrix, printing plate this way, you just want to get your hands to the specific result of printing.

The paint blob butterflies are one example of this :-D

Alyssa Edmee Fanning

Monoprints are very much the same. "Mono" means one.
When you have a permanent printing plate and you ink it in a specific way, so the print is unique, then you have create a monoprint.

Jane Schwartz Gates

Most stamped ATCs are monoprints, as the stamp is being inked differently and pushed in different spots with each print made.


Thursday, September 1, 2011

"Grafiikka" - printmaking: lithography

Lithography is sort of opposite to etching and that stuff. You start with a smooth stone or metal, on which you draw the image with something greasy, and then etch everything that hasn't been drawn onto, and when you ink the stone, the ink will stuck on greasy bits, and not in the etched areas.


Edward Munch

 Maurice Sendak

Eileen Mayo


Interesting part of this is, that when color lithography was invented in mid 19th century, they printed all the postcards, posters, ads and paper things, like masks and paperdolls with this method. 
Mucha posters are lithographs. Just so that you know ;-)
Also the grand illustrated fairytale books that were one of the greatest inventions of the Victorian era :-D
(not really, but - I do adore Edmund Dulac, Arthur Rackham and the others...)


Also, the modern printing technique is in all practicality just another form of lithography. Even though you use photography and computers to produce the "stone" of flexible metal, and bend it into a cylinder for pressing, it's still the same idea...

Wednesday, August 31, 2011

Monday, August 29, 2011

"Grafiikka" - printmaking: etching


Anders Zorn

M.C.Escher

Alfredo Zalce

I'm sorry, I'm not feeling well, so no more artwork. I might add more later on.

I am also aware of that these might not be etched, but a combination of different techniques... there's
- etching - you cover the plate with wax or some other stuff and draw the image on the wax, and then etch the surface of the plate with some acid
- dry needle - you scraft the plate with a needle
- mezzotint - you prepare the plate by thoroughly roughening it and then polishing the parts you wish to stay lighter.
- aquatint - you prepare the plate by spreading resin on it and then etching it, so has a distinct granular feeling on it. The image is then created by further etching the plate, or scratching it aso.
and then there's some more

all these produce different surfaces, but I'm not in condition to look into it closer. I'm sorry.

Sunday, August 28, 2011

"Grafiikka" - printmaking: engraving





Durer's Knight, Death and Devil and a pencil drawing inspired by it, by Theodor Baierl.
I know it's not an engraving, but I like it, and I wanted to show it with Durer :-)


Copper engravers make stamps and money. This little elephant is about the size it was made.


This is by Czeslaw Slania, a Polish artist, who became to know as the stamp engraver of Sweden and court engraver :-) I love his stamps :-)

White line engraving from 15th century