The seminar at X Marks the Bokship (how lovely to sit around a table with flowers on it!) was about self publishing - part 1 - the production side (next week, the promotion side of publishing).

Snippets: the benefits of working with independent publishing companies (eg AND or Bedford Press); the task of talking to printers; the advisability of artists with gallery representation setting up an imprint as a way of making work that doesn't go through the gallery. Strategies for paying for books (do they ever recoup their costs?); printing technologies, eg risograph, and their limitations/possibilities; print on demand; working with a designer; spec sheets.
Because I know a little about commercial publishing (and would quite like to make editions of books-yet-unwritten), I found this really interesting, but it could seem overwhelming, dull - or pointless - to someone approaching book making from a different angle. The issue remains: who are your audience? how do you reach them? -- questions for next week.

In this twice-reflected made-up image is that the sun is tonally the same as the background -
in monochrome, it disappears -
Artists that Dan mentioned: Joseph Beuys's 1974 performance with a coyote (photo here and video here); the Hudson River School of painters; Andy Harper; Helen Sear; Susan Collins' electronic landscapes; Christiane Baumgartner's woodcuts; Tim Head.
This week's lecturer was Dan Hays, who is working on his PhD on the interface between digital technology and painting. He became known for his paintings of guinea pigs - and won the John Moores prize in 1997 -

His landscapes started from a photo of snow, and he appropriated some images from the internet - fuzzy stills from videos that he found on the website of another Dan Hays, in Colorado - and painted them pixel by pixel to make distorted, impressionistic images -



A whole day of printing on Thursday - more results in a separate post, but for now here's a piece that came to life when the black lines were overprinted with pale blue. The red marks happened to be on some newsprint lying under the cloth, and rather suggest that this cloth needs a bit of red -
Also, a session with the steamer - I brought in some fabric that had been printed long ago with procion dyes, and pinned it to paper to put in the steamer -


The results, after steaming, washing, and ironing - most of these pieces are destined to be overprinted with "my lines" -


No comments:
Post a Comment