Sunday, September 29, 2024

Recent prints in area Shows and Exhibitions


"BIRDS"

CAA Members Show

June 13th-July 14th 2024

Concord Art Association

Concord, MA

Image: NIGHT VISION, two block, color linoleum





CAA 25th Roddy Exhibition

Juror, Meg Smith, Gallery NAGA director

September 6- October 20, 2024

Concord, MA

Image: FIELD ARTIST, linoleum block print





"Interpretive New England"

July 10- August 25th, 2024

Byran Memorial Gallery

Jeffersonville, VT

Image: SPRING STREAM RUNNING,

            color reduction linoleum




"Up, Down and Along the Way"

North of Boston Print Collaborative

July 2-July 31, 2024

Parker River National Wildlife 

Visitor Center, Newburyport, MA

Image: TOWN CRIER, linoleum block print




MINI GEMS

December 7, '24 - January 4th 2025

Society of  American Graphic Artists

Union Square Gallery, NYC 

Image: CALADIUMS 3, color linoleum print 

Thursday, September 5, 2024

sunflowers

This year's sunflower crop has been spectacular.  The weather has been picture perfect providing plenty of opportunities to get out and paint the acres of golden yellow.

Some of the area farms I have been painting sunflowers are: Cider Hill Farms in Amesbury, Grant Farm in W. Newbury, Colby Farm in Newbury, and Old Wild Farm in Haverhill.

Some charcoal sketches.




































This past Sunday at the Gloucester Schooner Festival, there was a 'paint out' sponsored by the Cape Ann Plein Air. At the harbor park along Western Ave, crowds of people walked among the colorful gardens of dahlias and sunflowers with dozens of plein air painters stationed at their easels.  All in attendance, excited to view the Parade of Schooners.  
I noted, among the chaos of hundreds of moving boats, a lone lobsterman was seen pulling in his traps.



Friday, August 30, 2024

It's pie season

After devouring a delicious blueberry pie with friends, I decided to recycle the pie box and plastic container not into the recycle bin but into collagraph prints.

Looking at the aluminum pie tin I imagined it could be a sunflower head. Perhaps I have sunflowers on the brain. These last few weeks I have been outdoors painting and sketching lots of fields all aglow with brilliant yellow sunflowers. 

Here's some of the materials I used for making my collagraphs.


Here's my collagraph sunflowers I printed in my studio.



Inking table with inks and brayers for rolling up the plates.














For another sunflower print, I use the clear plastic container that housed the pie. I cut out a circular shape to be used as a printing plate. I then scratched deep lines into the plastic surface with a steel stylus, drawing a metal chair in a sunflower patch.
In addition to this plastic plate, other cardboard substrates were inked up and printed together on a press.

Here is the sunflower image inked and printed.


Presently, the fields of sunny sunflowers are fading.  Their large heads heavily laden with seeds are no longer upright turning towards the sun but hang low looking at the ground. The gold finches and other feathered guests are feasting on their nutritious bounty.