Showing posts with label silk screen. Show all posts
Showing posts with label silk screen. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 2, 2012

MoMa, Brand X, Alpha Price

Thursday, September 27th, the class visited two studios in Long Island  City, Queens and MoMa.

The first stop was Moma. We saw a new exhibition of the Slavs and Tatars. The exhibition was behind two huge beautiful rugs that opened as curtains. Inside, was a very dark room light up by four neon green lights hanging from the ceiling and some black lights on the underside of benches. The benches ran along two walls and were covered in literature based on the Slavs and Tatars. In the center was a fountain and on the far walls were two huge prints.


While there, I flipped through two of the books on the benches. One text spoke about a certain noise in a language formed by the sounds of the letters "Khhhhh". They explained that it had special meanings in different languages and how only people who spoke certain languages were able to make that noise. I believe thats the whole idea behind the "MOTHER TONGUES & FATHER THROAT" print.
I found the exhibition to be very interesting space. The benches, sound of the fountain, and reading was very meditative. Yet, if you stop focusing on those things and just looked around the room, it was extremely chaotic due to the lighting  and agressive prints. I found that if you tried to look near the floor or at people's feet,  your eyes couldn't focus on anything due to the lighting. I'm not sure if that was on purpose or just a coincidence. But there was a really interesting duality being created between  meditation and chaos.
After that exhibition, we went to MoMa's permanent print collection. That was a big change. This collection had your "normal" prints. The collection contained work by Warhol, Bourgeois, Matisse, Jasper Johns, Picasso, Clemins, Turrell, and many others. It was really nice to see less well known work by artists like Warhol, Matisse and Picasso. I also fell in love with a few pieces by Celmins and Turell.

Turell

Celmins
After that exhibition, I snuck away from the group for a little while and checked out an exhibition going on across the hall of the Quay Brothers. That exhibition was so awesome, for lack of a better word. When you walk in theres huge birch trees in the room and one of their silent films playing. The Quay brothers, I learned, did tons of films. Most starred many of their extremely creepy puppets they created. They also made absolutely beautiful drawings and prints. I really wish the rest of the class had gone to see it!

Our second stop was the studio of Brand X Editions. This studio was very different compared to the others we have been to so far. Unlike the past studios, Brand X does only commercial printing. Unlike other studios, they do oil based silk screening and use tons of chemicals and solvents. We got to see the extremely strenuous, time consuming process they go through to create silk screen prints for other artists. These prints are exact copies of the artist's work. It was really amazing to see how they are able to figure out how to create the same textures and brush strokes and imitate the hand behind each painting so exact. 
I learned about tons of hints for silk screening that I never would have thought of. For example, having (at least) two people pulling a print if the screen is too large and taping down little pieces of foam to stop the screen from sticking to the print.


They also had two printshop cats! Unfortunately I didn't get to meet them, but I saw them from afar and they were adorable. But I really don't see how they could survive there with all the chemicals in the air.

Our final stop was the studio of Alpha Price. Her studio was half of a tiny room in a beautiful old building. 

Her work was very interesting. I really enjoyed the piece she did with cutting an old iBook in half and carving into the screen. I wish she had shown more of her work though! I feel like we only saw four different things she had done, which was pretty disappointing.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

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