Wednesday 11 March 2015

New Website

I am excited to announce that I now have a new website! Please click on the link below and check it out!


I will no longer be updating this blog, but if you want updates on my work and upcoming exhibitions, you can follow me on Facebook via the link below:






Wednesday 30 April 2014

Vinegar and Vitriol Exhibiiton

Recently I've been hard at work on a new linocut of London City, which will be appearing soon in Vinegar and Vitriol, a printmaking exhibition. The exhibition will be held at Light Square Gallery (39 Light Square, Adelaide) and features all kinds of wonderful prints by the printmaking staff and alumni of AC Arts.

The exhibition runs from May 8 until May 30 and the opening hours are:
Monday - Friday: 9 am - 5 pm

Come along to the opening this Wednesday evening at 6 pm for fantastic art, live printing and Fox Creek wine!

Here is a sneak peek of one of my works appearing in the exhibition:

London City: Across the Millennium Bridge, 2014
Hand coloured linocut (edition of 4)

Hope to see you there!


Sunday 16 February 2014

Adelaide Park Lands Art Prize

I currently have a work in the Adelaide Park Lands Art Prize, which is an inaugural exhibition organized by the Adelaide Park Lands Preservation Society. It showcases 85 artists and is held in the Adelaide Festival Centre Artspace Gallery (above Dunstan Playhouse). The exhibition runs from February 15 until April 6, and the opening times are:

Wednesday - Sunday: 12 pm - 4 pm
Thursday: 12 pm - 8 pm

There are many different media and subjects, but all reflect some aspect of the park lands. Below is my entry, which depicts the view of the park lands and Adelaide City from Colonel Light's statue. I like how the open spaces of the park lands contrast with the constant changing and evolving of the city, and I feel that they are a very special and unique part of Adelaide. Hopefully they are here to stay!

Adelaide City and the Park Lands: Colonel Light's Vision, 2013
Hand coloured lincut (edition of 4)



Wednesday 5 February 2014

Australian Bookplate Design Award

Exciting news to kick off 2014...I am delighted to announce that I am the winner of the Best Australian Relief Bookplate in the Australian Bookplate Design Award 2013. The award celebrates the art of bookplates (decorative labels, often on the inside front covers of books, to indicate the owner or from whose library the book came). Bookplates are fairly small and usually have images relating to or symbolizing the owner. My bookplate contains the words Ex Libris (Latin for "from the library of") and my name. I have also included an image of Adelaide, a city which often features in my artwork.

An exhibition will be held later this year of selected entries in Victoria. At this stage I am unsure of the exact details, but will keep you posted!

Hand coloured linocut (uneditioned)

Saturday 21 December 2013

Exhibition at Wirra Wirra


On Wednesday I hung some works at the cellar door of Wirra Wirra winery, McLaren Vale. If you are passing through during the festive season it's well worth checking out (and the wine is rather nice)!

The exhibition features some older works, as well as a couple of new prints that haven't been exhibited before. The exhibition will be on until December 31st. 

Thursday 17 October 2013

Playing Cards


For something different I decided recently to develop and print a pack of playing cards. I was heavily inspired by the masks and figurines in the Pacific Cultures Gallery at the South Australian Museum, and had a lot of fun designing the coloured cards and jokers! 

Jokers
Design from back of card 
I printed the cards from several lino blocks onto large sheets, then cut them into individual cards and hand coloured the Jacks, Queens, Kings and Jokers with watercolour.

 

For the final touch I wrapped up the packs in individual boxes, ready for giving as gifts. They are also available for purchase, so contact me if interested!





Monday 25 March 2013

Styles and Methods: Part 3

Another printmaking process I like to experiment with is etching. It is a fairly process driven technique as there are a number of steps to achieve a satisfactory end result. 

Various metals can be used for the matrix plate, such as zinc, steel and aluminium, but I like copper the best for its ability to retain delicate lines and leave very little plate tone behind. (Unfortunately copper is also fairly expensive)! I begin with a sheet of copper, then bevel the edges so they are no longer sharp. I degrease the copper plate by rubbing it over with a mix of whiting powder, vinegar and water, wash it off, then cover the front and back in bitumen, (a kind of waxy resist), to protect the metal in the etching process. 

To create a line etching I use a variety of sharp tools (anything goes! needles, nails, skewers, steel wool etc) to carve into the bitumen, leaving areas of the copper exposed. Once I am happy with my design, I place the plate into a "bath" of ferric chloride to etch the exposed areas of the copper. The rest is safely protected with my bitumen layer. Different metals etch slightly differently, but for copper I check it fairly regularly and take it out to rinse off the build up of gunk which forms with etching. When I feel that my lines are deep enough, I take out the plate and remove the bitumen layer. I can now do a proof!  

After I have set up my printing press to the right height and placed my paper in a water bath, I use a piece of card to spread the ink over the entire surface of the plate, making sure I get into the etched lines. I take as much ink off the surface as possible, then use tarlatan scrunched into a ball to push the ink further into the grooves and take off the excess. I then use either my hand or thin paper such as leaves from a phone book to remove the rest of the excess ink on the surface of the plate, still making sure I leave the ink in the etched lines. I clean up the edges, then place the plate facing up on the bed of the press. My wet paper is patted dry, then placed over the plate. Felt blankets are placed on top as they are used in this printing process to help push the paper right into the grooves and pick up all the ink. Once run through the press I can now peel back the paper and see the results! 

If I am happy with my proof print, I can go ahead and print the edition. If I feel like I need to add something else, I begin the entire process again!

Hübbe Court, 2010
Etching on zinc (edition of 4)

The image above was the very first etching I ever made. Now that I have had lots of practise in between there are some things I would do differently, such as clean up the edges and have a more even plate tone. But I still remember the thrill of trying a new technique and the excitement of peeling back the paper for the first time!

Ghosts, 2011
Multiplate etching and aquatint on copper (uneditioned)

This image was created using two copper plates, one inked in blue and the other in black. The black fish were done using the line etching method I have described above, but the blue...I'll be getting to that...in the next blog!