Printed Matters
by Tom Wachunas
“Print is the best
of God’s inventions.” - Martin Luther –
“The act of
printing has always seemed to me a miracle, just such a miracle as the growing
up of a tiny seed of grain to an ear – an
everyday miracle, even the greater because it happens every day. One
drawing is sown on the stone or the etching plate, and a harvest is reaped from
it.” – Vincent Van Gogh -
EXHIBITION: Print That
– selections from the permanent collection
at the Canton Museum of Art, through July 22 www.cantonart.org
There’s still a
few days left to visit the Canton Museum of Art and view Print That – a thoroughly diverse and edifying selection of prints
from the museum’s permanent collection. This is a remarkable compilation, and one that
reminds me how thrilling it can be to see the look of astonishment that crosses
many of my art appreciation students’ faces when they fully comprehend the many
challenging processes involved in printmaking. An artist can’t simply generate
an image with the same spontaneity or immediate results as when making a
drawing on paper or a painting on canvas. There are specific procedures and
mechanical disciplines involved.
For example, in a
multi-colored woodcut, particularly where edges of shapes need to meet
precisely, each color requires carving a separate block of wood. And let’s not
forget that printmakers think… backwards. That is, they need to remember that in
the print pulled off the wood block or metal plate or litho stone, the
right-left orientation of their original drawing gets reversed.
Lest you construe
from any of these pitiably few observations that I am a printmaker myself, be
assured I’m not - at least not since my
last hurriedly-made woodcut from around 1982, which was a terribly crude self-portrait
carved with a dull matte knife and a 16-penny nail. But seeing the stunningly
elaborate, ambitious design and color in works such as Jennifer Bartlett’s
combination silk screen- woodcut At Sea,
Japan here, a kind of longing to re-engage the sheer, magical craft of it all
stirred inside me.
No promises, but maybe
someday my prints will come.
Photos: Top – Crak by Roy Lichtenstein, 1964
Lithograph / Forest Shade, Lithograph
by Stow Wengenroth / At Sea, Japan, woodcut
and silk screen by Jennifer Bartlett
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