Posts tagged relief printmaking
The Met and IFPDA Talk Linocut

IFPDA’s Print Month in October 2021 featured an online program called, Prints in Relief; Print Study Day Presented by The Metropolitan Museum of Art. The IFPDA is the International Fine Print Dealers Association. One of the three speakers was Rachel Mustalish, Conservator at The Metropolitan Museum of Art, who gave a talk titled, Linocuts: Making and Meaning.

I recently went back and watched it on YouTube and thought it was a compelling introduction to linocut printmaking, including its early days. The lino printing portion of the video starts at about the 58:33 mark.

Some of the subjects she touches on in the talk are:

  • The invention of linoleum.

  • The basics of making a linocut print.

  • The Lark, May (1895) by Bruce Porter and other early linocut work.

  • The aesthetic characteristics of a linocut and comparisons to woodcut.

  • Linocut examples from Matisse, Claude Flight, Sybil Andrews, Lill Tschudi, Cyril Power and Picasso.

  • The style and influence of artists associated with the British Grosvenor School.

  • Contemporary approaches to linocut from artists such as Chuck Close, Bill Woodrow, Victoria Mamnguqsualuk and Kara Walker.

You might watch it if you’re interested in the history of the medium.

Surface Impressions 2022 - Relief Print Exhibition

I’m really happy to have a linocut in a new print exhibition called, Surface Impressions, in Lincoln, NE. There are seventy-four relief prints in the show, which was juried by Sean Starwars. The selected works are on view at LUX Center for the Arts and Constellation Studios from June 3 - August 26, 2022.

My contribution is a multicolor linocut print called, Aloft II. I wrote about this series of aerial landscape inspired prints in a blog post where I also have a short video of me printing the linocut on a press.

San Francisco Bay Area Shop with Carving Tools for Relief Printmaking

A little shout-out for a local gem of a store that sells carving tools for woodblock and linocut printmaking, not to mention lots of other types of Japanese hand tools. The shop is called Hida Tool and it’s located on San Pablo Avenue in Berkeley, California. A long time ago, I bought some Power Grip carving tools there and I recently picked up a #1000 grit sharpening stone.