
As a member of Gainsborough’s House Print Workshop, short printing courses have enabled me to tap into my artistic passions, giving me an enthusiasm for learning which was further fuelled by becoming an art student. It helped me to meet up with like minded artists and create work using techniques which were new to me yet not totally baffling, since as an engineer, heavy plant and process equipment was very familiar.
Following my visit the the British Museum to handle Goya’s magnum opus The Disaster of War folio I was inspired to create a couple of prints based on Goya’s Great Deeds! against the dead! print.
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The following four acid etchings consist of a personal ‘Rake’s Progress’ of sorts, whilst all of the etchings in this series reference past masters (click on an image for details):
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This collection of prints refers to the draw of the coast and it’s quiet power (click on an image for details):
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These prints refer to the ongoing situation in Israel (click on an image for details):
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These three prints refer to the British forces operation in Afghanistan, the marks of the boot prints represent a tally of the fallen whilst the box justified print details a pseudo computer program lists the roll call of the dead servicemen and women (click on an image for details):
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These two prints are part of a collaboration; the first was inspired by a six word essay written by Trudy Ellis: – ‘He reaches out for his mother’s hand’.
The second is a woodcut made unique by the addition of gold-leaf. It is inspired by Averil Green’s art therapy images and Ivy Jones’ poetry. The rose stem traces the Suffolk coastline and the flowers highlight the Hospice sites. The work draws on the semiotic theories of Claude Levi-Strauss, Jacques Derrida, Ferdinand de Saussure and Roland Barthes, specifically the concept of binary oppositions, transcendence, reception theory and gestalt psychology (click on an image to zoom):
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These were inspired by the Alhambra Palace in Spain (click on an image for details):
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