Over a whole year has passed since Nina and I started our Lithography Fellowship (and as usual I am behind in updating my blog!). Like Nina (https://ninaoskarsdottir.wordpress.com/2016/04/15/one-year-of-litho/) I thought it would be a good opportunity to look back at what we have done and achieved. It has not always been an easy journey, the process is complex and sometimes physically exhausting and there have been many frustrations and tribulations along the way. However I have found it to be the most wonderful medium to work with and it produces marks of a quality that I have not encountered in any other print technique. There is also great sense of connectivity due to the physicalty of the process which I love. Nina and I work very differently, I tend to spend a lot of time on each individual stone (maybe its so I dont have to grain as many!?) which means that I havent probably experimented as much as perhaps I could have. As such over the remaining year I am hoping to play around a little more with tusche washes, transfer paper and also monoprinting as a means of mark making directly on to the stone.
Looking back over the year I have processed 11 stones and 3 photolithograph plates and have experimented with transferring rubbings, used masking tapes and added colour using monoprints, stencils, photolithoplates, watercolour, aerosol spray paints, collage and chine colle. I have also explored working on different scales with 4 of the stones that I have processed being quite small (less than 20cm square - actually not traditional litho stones but the stones that we use to grain /physically remove the image from the larger stones when we no longer want to use the image). This has posed a challenge both in executing the drawing (I find it much easier to work on a larger scale due to the coarseness of some of the drawing materials used) and also printing the smaller stones. Lately I have tried registering two stones together with different tonal values to give a more complex image.
My huge thanks to LPW for providing this opportunity, ACE and of course to Serena for her endless patience and for sharing her vast knowledge!
Here are a few of the stones /prints produced over the year in date order - all the work relates to my continued work of Park Hill in Sheffield, the Brutalist Grade II* listed council estate
Very first stone experimenting with mark making, dry and liquid tusches and frottage
Second stone experimenting with marks drawn or rubbed on to transfer paper
Next stone experimenting with dry and liquid tusches and also micro masking tapes
Print of above stone experimenting with colour using stencils
First mini stone using masking tapes (not a huge successs!!)
Second mini stone using masking tapes (Bit better)
Next large stone - experimenting more with tapes/rubbings /splattering / different dry and liquid drawing materials
Experimenting with chine colle
3rd mini stone
New stone to produce two stone lithograph print
2nd stone for two stone lithograph print which when registered with the stone above gave the print below
Colour added using multiple monoprints (below)