Saturday 19 September Sunday 1 November

Similar documents
Pablo Picasso

Exploring the Art and History of Printmaking

Chapter 8. Printmaking. Kern ARH1000

Graphics. Lectures 4.1 Graphic Imagery 4.2 Visual Representation of Information and Data 4.3 Logos and Brand Identities. Fig

The history of the poster

Mixed Media. A piece of art can also be created with ink, chalk, crayon, fabric, metal or many other materials.

Lithographs. Boy on Zebra - Graciela Rodo Boulanger Jester Marc Chagall Composition - Joan Miro

Dox Thrash: Revealed a companion site to the Philadelphia Museum of Art exhibit: Dox Thrash: An African American Master Printmaker Rediscovered

Chapter 2.2: Media. Tools and Materials Artists Use

CREATING THE ILLUSTRATIONS FOR STORIES FOR SIMON BY LAUREN BRIGGS

BARBARA RAE RA PRINTS. a d a m. e: 24 CORK STREET LONDON W1S 3NJ t:

Glass Painting Techniques & Secrets from an English Stained Glass Studio by David Williams & Stephen Byrne Dog roses, Daffodils & Poppies

Printmaking Unit. Art 3200

Mixed Media. A piece of art can also be created with ink, chalk, crayon, fabric, metal or many other materials.

Exhibitions Student Curated Ink on Paper, Creating an Artistic Expression: Works on Paper from the Sacramento State Art Collection

Junior Drawing Artist

Information for teachers

Introduction to Printmaking

2. A painting of fruit, flowers or insects is called. 3. Paintings made from millions of tiny coloured dots are typical of the style.

LONG ISLAND S BEST 2016 RESOURCES. August 15 November 22, 2015

Art (ARTU) Courses. Art (ARTU) 1

Woodcut. Emil Nolde. Danish, worked in Germany ( ). Prophet % x 8¾" (32.1 x 22.2 cm). Given anonymously

Japanese Printmaking

The Nine Transfer Positions of the Large

60 terms in printmaking

A selection of etchings & lithographs by the leading figurative artists of the 20th century.

ART PROJECT for San Antonio College (TX) by the Student: Stephanie Hanus 2003/2004

The Art of Ad van Bokhoven by Jeremy Sutton DUTCH ARTIST MAKES GUEST APPEARANCE AT AMSTERDAM PAINTER CREATIVITY WORKSHOP

DOODLE S TEACHER GUIDE

Monotype Printmaking

A Finding Aid to the Wayne Thiebaud Papers, , in the Archives of American Art

Pearly White. An interview with Clive Head by Rosalyn Best

Norval Morriseau. We must be child-like, Simplicity of Spirit date unknown. Beaverbrook Art Gallery Art EduKit

A MAKING A MARK GUIDE - SKETCHING BY KATHERINE TYRRELL

Printmaking Lesson: Positive and Negative Prints

The Art of Evan Summer: Landscapes, Nocturnes, and Pigs

NORTH DEVON HERITAGE PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPETITION 2012

STONED IN PARIS JALAINI ABU HASSAN AHMAD ZAKII ANWAR LITHOGRAPHIC PRINTS FROM IDEM PARIS YOU ARE INVITED TO THE OPENING OF STONED IN PARIS

BRIEFING FOR PARENTS OF PRIMARY 2 STUDENTS

Did you know that the numbers on a limited edition print actually mean something?

Fallbrook Art Association Gallery Monthly Show Rules and Information

Aboriginal Printmaking

Existing in a place between the palpable and the

Overdale Community Primary School. Progression of Art Skills EYFS

Understanding Contemporary Art

ADVANCED GRAPHICS LONDON

Dear Friends and Collectors,

Objective 1 Generating Evidence: Using the processes of scientific investigation.

Session Key Objective from skills listed above (What is it that you want the children to learn?)

certain journeys 20 September to 8 October 2016 a survey of printmaking by Gary Shinfield

The Art Of Richard Diebenkorn By John Elderfield, Jane Livingston READ ONLINE

How the printing process works 19.1

Young children s scribbling stimulates individual cells and clusters of cells in the visual cortex for line and shape.

Artists Development Programme 2016/17

A N T H O N Y G A R R A T T

a practical approach to creativity

Triumvirate Kenojuak Ashevak. Beaverbrook Art Gallery Art EduKit. Kenojuak Ashevak (Canadian/Inuit b. 1927)

F I N D L A Y G A L L E R I E S

The Art Of Printmaking

A Symphony of Colour. Christopher Le Brun: A Symphony of Colour, A3 Editorial. June 1, 2017.

Centre of England Arts

Pablo Picasso: The Lithographs READ ONLINE

June /07/2017 Contesting Perspectives With David Hockney In Lithographs 0 COMMENTS ART & DESIGN (/SECTION/ART-DESIGN) / 28

April 1 April 27 at The Guild Gallery Chapman Cultural Center 200 East Saint John St. Spartanburg, SC 29306

Spot Colour Printing an explanation

Innova & Olmec Fine Art Inkjet Paper. Giclée & fine art prints, beautifully reproduced via

Who? Pablo Picasso ( ), Spanish painter & sculptor

THE LEMOND GALLERY CONTEMPORARY SCOTTISH FINE ART. Judith Bridgland and Jonathan Robertson Saturday 6 th September to Sunday 14 th September 2014

IMPORTANT: DO NOT REVEAL TITLES UNTIL AFTER DISCUSSION!

IN STUDIO WORKSHOP UPCOMING WORKSHOP DATES WORKSHOP 1 MAY 28 MAY 31, 2015

ARTS FINE ARTS ADULT FINE ARTS FINE ARTS: PAINTING/DRAWINGS/SCULPTURES & MORE PLEIN AIR PAINTING FARM BUREAU PROJECT. For Adult Fine Arts Entries

Archdeacon Cambridge Art and Design content and skills

Newsletter of the School of Color June 2012

VCE Studio Arts Study Design. Implementation briefing July August 2016

Pablo Picasso and Reduction Linocut Printmaking

ART SHOW RULES, DEFINITIONS & CATEGORIES

Class 1. Modern Art Curriculum Introduction. The Sleeping Gypsy (Rousseau) Les Demoiselles d Avignon (Picasso) Project Ideas

Here is space for you to sketch two caricatures. You can copy Monet s or you might try to draw a picture of someone you know. Hint: to draw a face in

PRINTMAKING TERMS & I N F O R M A T I O N

This is Branching Out

HOA6. General Certificate of Education June 2008 Advanced Level Examination. HISTORY OF ART Unit 6 Historical Study (2) Time allowed: 2 hours

CUBISM, SURREALISM AND ABSTRACT ART

SPECIAL EXHIBITION RESOURCE GUIDE FOR TEACHERS

The Whole is the Sum of its Parts. I can still recall my reaction upon first seeing a Chuck Close painting. It

Playing With Surface Design: Modern Techniques For Painting, Stamping, Printing And More PDF

Printmaking / Monoprinting. Art Explorations WSRHS

Poster History The oldest examples of modern poster design dates back to the 1860 s when colourfully illustrated posters were used to advertise such e

Gallery St. Ives Tokyo Japan

This course is designed for beginning students who wish to experience traditional hands on printmaking techniques/methods and materials.

The Painter. A painting newsletter from Christopher Leeper

Tonal Values -Training Your Eye

III. Recommended Instructional Time: Two (2) 40 minute sessions

Masterpiece: Poppies Artist: Georgia O Keeffe. Concept: Nature Lesson: Close-Up Flower Painting

** Please Note ** Artist s biography can be glued to back of white construction paper ahead of time.

The Heckscher Museum of Art

Kareem Rizk: Collage from Copenhagan

How to participate as a Visual Artist in the Coconut Grove Arts Festival

Under The Summer. Let us go then, you and I, when the evening is spread out against the sky, like a patient etherised upon a table.

Drawing from observation

A Finding Aid to the Jules Olitski Notes to Joan Olitski, , in the Archives of American Art

Transcription:

1 Saturday 19 September Sunday 1 November It is unusual to see paintings on show at the Devon Guild of Craftsmen but Michael Honnor s paintings and prints are integral to each other and Michael has been a Member of Devon Guild as a printmaker for over thirty years. It is his reputation as a painter, printmaker and teacher of printmaking which brings about this exhibition and we are delighted to be showing this remarkable body of work. Revelatory moments experienced during childhood are not uncommon; perhaps they are part of what is often called the magic of childhood, but a brief experience that determines a whole lifetime is remarkable and, if it s a positive experience, enviable. As a young boy, Michael watched a man painting on a beach and knew he was observing something full of meaning, something that from then on he knew he wanted to do himself. Although he first studied English at university, Michael has never deviated from his early conviction that painting would be the central activity of his life. River Bovey. Winter Sun. Lithograph Michael is chiefly a painter of landscapes, or where-watermeets-land-scapes and for him it all begins with working outdoors; he describes the genesis of a painting as finding the right place for a painting to come into his head and the right place can become a lifetime place leading to a number of paintings. So he might visit a place with an

2 expectation of a painting or, as he puts it, the chemistry between the expectation of a place and what you actually find there. Much of Michael s work is done in his home county of Devon but wherever he is, he tends to seek out the wilder places where there is weather and water and light. Michael works in bursts with one thing feeding another and, all being well, this leads to an expedition or series of painting days. The painting needs to get to a certain stage outside and then it comes into the studio for fine tuning and to make it better. He describes this process as adumbration bringing something from the darkness into the shadows and then asking what else is required of the painting to bring it further. In answer to the question, How do you know when you have made a good painting? Michael replies, You have to judge your own work but you are not the judge. I have learned to stay with a painting but occasionally I do abandon one. The paintings come first but the prints too are an essential part of Michael s work. A painting may lead to a print, or several prints, and this exhibition has several examples of a painting-toprints relationship. So what exactly is a lithograph and why make a lithograph instead of, say, a linocut, a collagraph or an etching? Lithography was invented in the late eighteenth century by Alois Senefelder, a German actor and author, who used it as a cheap method of publishing theatrical works. Lithography can be used to print text or artwork onto paper or other suitable material. 1 Lithography, using a limestone plate, is done by drawing an image directly onto the smooth, level stone with a waxy crayon (image right). 1 Wikipedia

3 The stone is then treated with a mix of acid and gum which etches the parts of the stone not protected by the waxy drawing. Next, the stone is dampened, causing the etched areas to retain water, which in turn repels an application of oilbased ink so, when the paper is pressed to the stone, it picks up only the marks of the original drawing. In the early part of the 19 th century, lithography was not particularly prominent as an artists medium as there were still some technical difficulties with the process. When these were overcome, a few artists, in particular Goya, Géricault and Delacroix, began to use lithography to make prints but by the mid-century its use was again sporadic. In the 1890s advances in colour lithography were made and Jules Chéret (image left), often hailed as the father of the modern poster, popularised colour lithographs to a new generation of designers and painters, most famously Toulouse-Lautrec. By the beginning of the 20 th century a new chapter began when a Parisian printshop run by Fernand Mourlot invited some wellknown artists to explore printmaking in his workshop. These included Picasso, Matisse, Chagall, Miro, Braque, Dufy and Léger who worked directly onto lithographic stones in order to create works which could be printed by master printers in small editions. These partnerships were used to produce lithographic posters which in turn were used to promote the artists work and then, as artists realised the scope of lithography, to produce artists prints. There is now a more modern form of lithography where metal (aluminium or zinc) plates are used instead of limestone. Stones are no longer used commercially as metal plates are

4 much faster to print from especially when wrapped around rotary cylinders. Waterless lithography works on the same principle but the water part of the process is replaced with silicone. For artists prints, metal plates can be worked on by hand in much the same way as stones, and the image can then be printed directly from the plate. Michael uses both methods, partly because the metal plates allow for much bigger, lighter plates and partly because it s another process to experiment with. He describes lithography as the most painterly form of printmaking in that it can accurately reproduce the finest pencil mark and the most delicate reticulation (tide lines) of wash patterns. It s a wonderful medium, with alchemy, which is capable of astonishing things. Lithography is also recognised as a graphic print technique that can capture light, shadow and a sense of depth as in Escher s 1955 lithograph (above), Three Worlds. Michael peeling a print So, is printmaking easier than painting? Michael s answer is, yes, printmaking is easier than painting. It has a transformative quality and practitioners love pressing one surface against another. But a lithograph is not quite the same it s a hard thing to teach. Printmaking does have an element of craft in it and

5 part of the magic is repeatability. Like a footprint in wet sand, or a fingerprint, the magic of the mark that s left behind and one you can make again and again. Painting is temporal whereas printmaking is more like cooking. Michael has taught printmaking for almost all his working life, mostly in the Dartington Print Workshop which he set up in 1978, but also in schools to children and young people. He describes teaching as one of the most rewarding experiences of his life and something that has, in turn, taught him a huge amount. Dartington Print Workshop has a loyal following of a number of regulars who use the workshop but Michael ensures its facilities and teaching expertise are made available to all. Michael printmaking with a group of refugees What is Michael s own studio like? Well, to start with, it s entirely made with his own hands. Perhaps it s relevant to mention that Michael s father, Pat Honnor, was a founding Member of Devon Guild of Craftsmen and a boat builder. He clearly imparted many of his skills to Michael who, if he needs a particular item or something made specifically for a particular purpose, makes it himself. The studio has both southwest and northeast facing roof lights so it is flooded with natural light. When questioned about the non-painter s belief that studios should have a north light, Michael says it s a myth started by the Pre-Raphaelites, who thought the cold purity of a

6 north light was the best light for painting. Michael s studio has as much light as possible. This photograph (right) of Michael painting by a Devon river was taken by photographer Chris Chapman in 1993 when they were both in an exhibition at RAMM 2,New Inhabitants, which showed the work of artists, photographers and sculptors who lived and worked on Dartmoor. The picture captures the central activity of Michael s working life, a painter painting water and light, and resonates with the outcome of a chance encounter on a beach a long time ago. Photograph by Chris Chapman Michael Honnor is represented by the Thackeray Gallery in London. www.thackeraygallery.com His next exhibition with them is from 7-24 June 2016. P. de Burlet for Devon Guild of Craftsmen, September 2015 2 Royal Albert Memorial Museum, Exeter