Thursday, 10 January 2013

Seven ‘Professors of Print’ show art’s possibilities at Washington Printmakers

Georgia Deal and Dennis O'Neil both evoke the past, albeit in different ways. Deal recalls the early days of print- and map-making in such multi-panel screenprints as "Atoll," while O'Neil's impressionistic vistas suggest the mists of yesteryear.

Justin Strom's dark style is also multi-layered, but those strata involve such modern materials as textured polypropylene and urethane resin. The artist's "Untitled" features blossoms both below and, seemingly, above the surface: Bursts of color within the layers of resin float over the brilliantly hued, collaged image. There's a hint of the goth-rock album cover to Strom's prints, which feature wings, flowers and human faces and hands.

Also on display, in the gallery's small Press Room, is "Rilievi," a selection of embossed and printed works by Maria Sofia Caligiuri. Designed to evoke the Maryland artist's southern Italian childhood, the mostly white-on-white pieces hold the contours of shells, eggs and other objects. Caligiuri's reliefs are made primarily of plaster and paper, with occasional hints of color. They combine a simple, tactile appeal with a philosophical aspect: The three-dimensional paper outlines suggest the absence of remembered objects, but also the permanence of their forms.



'Winter Contemporary Show'

There's nothing as bold as Strom's work in the Old Print Gallery's "Winter Contemporary Show," but there are many beautifully rendered pieces in a variety of formats and styles. With one print each by 24 artists, the selection doesn't have any particular theme or motif.

There are traditional black-and-white etchings and linocuts, such as Paul Marcus's shadowy "The Old Lady" and Tenjin Ikeda's "A Study in the Natural World," which hides a child amid flowers and butterflies. But there are also looser, more colorful aquatints and monotypes, whose techniques mirror the delicacy of watercolor painting. These include representational works such as Peri Schwartz's "Bottle and Jars I" and Susan Goldman's "Tangerine Vases," as well as Philip Bennet's abstract "Creatures."

Prints can suggest much with a few lines, sometimes highlighted by blocks of color. Fine examples of this approach include Edward McCluney's "OSSACIP," a nude silhouetted against a bright yellow background; Peter Gourfain's "Winter Light," a domestic scene endowed with drama by its thick black lines and contrast of blue and orange; and Ellen Nathan Singer's "Autumn Market," which depicts fruit, flowers and wooden barrels with seasonal gold and bronze.

Source: http://www.news.theusalinks.com/2013/01/10/seven-professors-of-print-show-arts-possibilities-at-washington-printmakers/

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