Jazz Green : Artist Journal

Posts tagged ‘prints’

ever increasing circles

March 9th, 2010

Some recent printmaking experiments – intaglio prints made from some worn and discarded sandpaper discs that I have been collecting for a while.


[prints, proofs and other experiments on the wall]

Rather than retaining their perfectly circular shapes, I have instead been tearing and distressing the paper edges, as I print and reprint the proofs.


[eroded sandpaper used as a printing plate]

I also wanted to pursue the idea of the imperfect or broken circle, or with parts missing or two halves that don’t quite match – cracks , fissures, fused joints.


[detail of embossed surface textures]

Most of these first experiments are printed on white drawing paper, some are on Hahnemuhle, some on Khadi. I also tried some viscosity printing – a technique that enables you to print two, three or even four colours in one go – it requires more prep work but the results are immensely textured and tactile – and even the crumpled paper discards have visual appeal. Most of these initial trials will be heading for the collage drawer…but I have some heavyweight paper set aside for the next stage of printing…


[crumpled inked paper]

Thinking back to the earlier intaglio collagraphs on paper (on canvas), yet again I didn’t want to end up with a flat print, so I erased the evidence of the plate mark or edge by trimming some of the proofs, giving the print some potential as a sculptural form rather than a material mark on paper.


[more embossing textures]

During this time, I have been pondering on (or should that be inspired by?) the earth’s shifting tectonic plates and the so-called ‘ring of fire’ (according to scientists, Concepcion city has moved ten feet to the west since Chile’s earthquake), to the micro-ecologies of lichens, my collections of striated beach pebbles and hag stones, the geometric pattern on a dinner plate, even an abandoned bird’s nest that fits in the palm of my hand, and the strange fruit encountered in the hedgerow…


[lichens, found on churchyard gravestones in Suffolk]

striated beach pebbles
[collection of striated beach pebbles]


[pebbles with holes; hag stones]


[Barbara Brown dinner plate]


[a tiny bird's nest]


[strange fruit in hedgerow]

While printing some of these collagraphs (if printing from sandpaper comes under that category) I heard on Poetry Please (on Radio 4) the poem, Try to praise the mutilated world by Adam Zagajewski … (but I am sure some of its depth is lost in translation)…

Lastly, I have been accepted as a new member of Artworks. Established in 2000, Artworks is a dynamic group of thirty contemporary East Anglian professional artists working in a range of styles and media, some with national and international reputations. So, I am looking forward to the new connections and opportunities that being a member of Artworks will bring into my creative life.

painting by numbers

January 16th, 2010

Another hand-coloured, intaglio collagraph print on paper, mounted on canvas… titled according to my colour value rules (read about that here..).. and this one is called… Nepal


Nepal 2010, intaglio and painting on canvas

which called for a quick visit to the encyclopedia for the casually-minded, wikipedia… shown below, is a topographical map of the country, bordered by India to the south, and China to the north.

There is a rich and diverse geography to Nepal, with tropical low-lying plains in the south, rising up through verdant foothills up to the mountainous peaks of the Himalayas. Curiously, the country has five distinct seasons – spring, summer, the monsoon season, then autumn and winter. When I think of Nepal, I think immediately of tea, and of the very abstract agricultural patterns of the steep hillside plantations. So, it seems not so far-fetched to see similar striations echoed in my own work – however unintentional.

Thinking more about painting by numbers (after Gerhard Richter and his colour chart paintings) leads one to the master of appropriation, Andy Warhol..


Andy Warhol, Do It Yourself (Landscape) 1962

…and then, Damien Hirst (all three artists were featured in the recent Colour Chart exhibition)..

Damien Hirst - spot painting
Damien Hirst, 2-Methylbenzimidazole 2008/09

Hirst inherits the concept of art as a mass-produced brand from Warhol, using assistants for his chemical spot paintings, and then later manufacturing ’spot painting kits’ with strict instructions as to the completion of the artwork for the new owners. Rules for these spotted works included the spacing beween the dots and that a single colour appears only once in the final composition. Many of the titles (and the ideas) for Hirst’s work are appropriated from medical textbooks and technical manuals – inspired by his idol Francis Bacon, who found inspiration in many a documentary or medical image.

Artistic appropriation is good; it’s about finding something interesting and then applying it to something else, for a different purpose – whether it’s conceptually based or process-related.

Thinking back to the paint colour charts and the assignment of names to certain colours (and my reuse of them), these branded (sometimes trademarked) names are yet another type of appropriation, taking words out of their original context (or putting them in a new context) -  their minimal poetry promises a piece of paradise, a taste of the exotic, in harmony with the natural world – less about colour meanings or symbology, but more about instilling ideas and aspirations in the potential buyer.

about a cube and square

January 14th, 2010

I was delighted to read today that one winner of my recent Art Giveaway square collage postcards has very generously blogged about my artwork in his own art and drawing blog – I do not feel worthy of such praise, but the kindness of his acknowledgement is most flattering. I urge anyone passing by to read his blog for the wealth of art-historical references and for the attention given to the process of drawing as both creative practice and theoretical discourse.


collage postcards, 2009

On another note, here is another of my intaglio collagraphs on canvas, titled according to my colour value rules (although i decided to add the ‘red’ afterwards).


havana [red], intaglio collagraph on canvas, 5″ x 5″ x 1.5″

I was inspired to pay a short visit to the website flickr to view some photographs of the crumbling decay of the city of havana – a place that I can only dream of visiting – but another example of how some rules of chance can lead us to see new things.

Lastly, I am endeavouring to be more rigorous with using the appropriate capitalisation and punctuation from now on…

Edit: If you want to support, through charitable gift aid, the first aid and recovery effort after the shocking devastation and loss of lives in the aftermath of the Haiti earthquake, please see this page on the BBC news website for ways to donate…

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The website of British Fine Artist Jazz Green MA RCA. Abstract landscape paintings, fine art photography. All images and text copyright the artist.