Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Matthew's Collection (9/21)

Unfortunately, I didn't find that much that I like in Matthew's collection.
The few I enjoyed were:


  • http://www.sonnenzimmer.com/memory/ 
    • This is a poster making duo. Although I didn't enjoy all of their work, there were a few prints that I found really pleasing.
  • http://www.tinyshowcase.com/

    • I really enjoyed this site.  If I had some extra money, I would definitely be buying a few of these prints. Theres also a lot of great work of all different mediums below the store. My personal favorite was "Blood Reflects" by Alexander Barton.
  • Print Events this weekend!
    • I'm really happy that he included this. I wasn't aware of all the shows going on this weekend, aside from New York Book Fair. I can't wait to visit these galleries!

Charles Lahti Studio, Bushwick Print Lab, and Dennis McNett Studio

Last Thursday, September 20th, the class visited three different studios in Brooklyn.

The first stop was the studio of Charles Lahti. This studio was a very tiny place in Bushwick, Brooklyn. Charles Lahti is a very interesting person. He told us about how printmaking, and painting, were always a part of his life. He started collecting prints when he was a child, buying them for a few dollars a piece. He got to work with many master printers, such as Rauschenberg, Liechtenstein, and Warhol! It really was an honor to be able to visit his studio and meet him. As I said, his studio is very tiny; one main work room, one back room filled to the ceiling with screens and canvases, and a bathroom/wash-out room. The studio doesn't have any fancy industrial equipment. For exposing screens, they just used four photo lights. He admitted that he needed to outsource for printing images, because he was basically computer illiterate. There were two assistants there, one was actually a SUNY Purchase alumnus, who said were really helpful to him when it came to silk screening.
He was a very honest, to-the-point kind of guy. He told us that he had recently gotten into doing more commercial art; making prints into gift boxes and wrapping paper. He also told us that a lot of the time he just barely is able to pay the rent on his studio. I thought his honesty with us was really great.  It was better to hear what it was like to be living on your art and how to find other ways to make due but still do what you love.

The second stop was the Bushwick Print Lab. This was located on the border of Bushwick, Brooklyn and Queens. The studio focuses on silk screening. This studio was located in a beautiful building that was at one point a residential apartment building. The studio has two flat silk screen tables and two or three apparel tables. The walls were at least 10 feet tall, stacked to the ceiling with thousands of screens and a ton of inks and other supplies. The building also had a shared balcony where artists can go eat, smoke, or just get some fresh air. This balcony had the most amazing view (pictured below): 
The studio and the people working there really didn't impress me that much. The manager, I guess you can call him, seemed a bit pretentious. He kept talking about the same things over and over again, making sure to drop names and show off this vast knowledge of everything. Yet not really giving us any insight about the studio itself. Also, he barely spoke to the class unless Bill reminded him we were standing there filling his studio. As a whole, aside from that beautiful view, I was not very impressed by the Bushwick Print Lab.

Our last stop was the studio of Dennis McNett, the man behind Wolfbat Studios. This studio was like a breath of fresh air to me (after finally catching my breath after climbing 4-5 flights of stairs to get there). Dennis works with woodcuts and linocuts, which I was really excited to see because that's what I like to focus in. It was also really cool to see that he's not just making prints, but turing his print into sculptures, which he uses in performance art. His woodcuts are extremely impressive. I was lucky enough to see a few that were still in progress. The wood appeared to be MDF, which I'm not a fan of, and are very large scale. I was very inspired going to this studio, and I can't wait to have room to do massive woodcuts of my own.
Dennis seems like a really great guy. He was very down to earth and treated us all as his peers, even though he's pretty big in the print world and now in the skate/fashion world (making prints for Vans shoes and graphics for skateboards and snowboards. He was very amusing to hear talk about his work. I loved the back story behind the concept of wolfbat. Here are a few pictures I took during this visit:
- a huge pile of beautiful prints
-awesome sculpture


- woodcuts in progress


Monday, September 17, 2012

Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop and the Manhattan Graphics Council (9/13)

Last Thursday, our class took a trip down to Hell's Kitchen in Manhattan and visited two really great printmaking studios.

Our first stop was the Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop on W 39th St. and 8th Ave. This workshop is an awesome little studio on the second for of a beautiful building full of other artist studios. This Workshop is also incorporated with this really cool zine "Carrier Pigeon".  It was really great to see what was being made by, what mostly seemed to be, recent college graduates and how they were able to make their way in the printmaking world. Our tour guide was actually a purchase alumnus who seemed to have come very far, which helped make the future look a little bit brighter for us.
The studio had a beautiful lithography set up - much nicer than what I was used to at Purchase. Everything in the studio was spotless; you were actually able to lean against furniture without fear of getting ink on your nice pants! We learned the "proper way" to dry prints (flat, between boards, not on drying racks). 
Yet, as nice as the Workshop was, it seemed a bit chaotic. There were a lot of different programs, internships, and memberships going on. It seemed difficult to keep track of all of it. It was also a bummer that they didn't seem to have any good silkscreen facilities.

Our second stop was the Manhattan Graphics Center, located on W 40th St.
This studio was amazing to see in contrast with the Robert Blackburn studio. The MGC was run by an older generation of printmakers. Right off the bat, you saw a huge difference in the generations. There was food and drinks waiting for us as we walked in, they made sure to tell us where both bathrooms were and just seem genuinely excited to have us there. They were extremely knowledgable about everything they were talking about and you could clearly tell that they love what they do. I really loved the fact that they completely ignore newer digital approached to printmaking, yet still provided facilites for silkscreen, block printing, lithography, intaglio, and still managed to make room for a dark room. 
It was great to see all the work coming from the studio and from students that they taught and to learn the history of the company.
The MGC also provides different programs for people who are interested in all different types of printmaking, including internships, open workshops and classes. This is definitely a studio I would love to visit again.

Marina's Collection ( 9/14)

Marina sent a lot of great sites in her collection email this week.
I especially enjoyed:


  • http://www.booooooom.com/ 
    • It's a great source to see a bunch of awesome new works of all mediums. I was fascinated by the tree phonograph on the home page. I found that I just kept going through the archive for at least a good 20 minutes, I love how easy to navigate the site is, with links to each category at the top. It's also really great that they have links to other awesome blogs on the side that everyone should take a look at.
  • http://paulphung.com 
    • Paul Phung's photos are very beautiful. I was particularly drawn to his visual diary collection ( which was what Marina linked us to) as opposed to his other work. His photo's are so simple, yet I find them so interesting. It's probably because he find beauty in such mundane places and situations, such a girl standing in the corner with her hair in her face and an empty laundromat. Unfortunately, I found his other work to feel more like school projects. 
  • http://yerinmok.tumblr.com/ 
    • As for Ye Rin Mok's work,  the same could be said as Paul Phungs. Her photography is very simple and beautiful. Her portrait projects seem so natural - its great to see a portrait in followed by images that tell a story about the person.
  • http://www.oogaboogastore.com/ 
    • This was probably my favorite part of the whole collection. I loved just about everything in this store. I really can't wait to see them at the NY Book Fair, so I can try and get a copy of Lab's with Abs!
  • http://weeknights.wordpress.com/
    • Although I didn't enjoy that much of the artwork this gallery was showing, it's really awesome to see what Purchase alumni are up to and to see fellow classmates getting their art in gallery shows.
  • Bonsai by Alejandro Zambra
    • After reading the first couple of paragraphs, this is definitely added to the top of my reading list. It seems very interesting and the writing style is great. I can't wait to finish it.
These sites were fantastic. There was so much great work going on. She definitely gave me new tumblr pages and blogs to follow check out daily.