
If Printmaking were outlawed tomorrow, what about your own practice? Would you be able to continue in another medium?
I think I mention last week at the PMA that I don't consider myself as a print-maker. I have been thinking about this question about myself being considered as a print-maker or as an artist throughout 2 years of graduate school.I fell in love with printmaking when I was in undergraduate and the story goes on very cheesy(which doesn't need be written).
Anyways, I slowly realized that I was drawn in the the process of making an image. Lithography was the tool for me at the time and therefore I made my decision to move to ABQ, NM to learn more about the medium. Going to Tamarind was one of the best experience that I had in America.
Coming from Tamarind, I had a lot of questions for myself in my art practice.
Ty


The physicality of the black pigment (Xerox toner) and how it creates an image on a plastic surface (Myler) are the things that I am working with. I don't make prints for my own art practice, however, printmaking will be very very very missed if it were outlawed tomorrow.
1 comment:
I don't want to give away anything for our upcoming critiques and for, even more important, Myungwon's thesis show, but when I read your last paragraph and I look at the piece I JUST saw in your studio, I think the materials you use (be they xerox toner or blacks inks from other printing processes) work into the medium well given their importance in your own personal/artistic history.
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