Printers’ Fair

I have been overwhelmed (in a delighted way) by all the positive response to the news that the City of St. John’s selected one of my images for the facade of the Civic Centre downtown. I am truly amazed and grateful to everyone who has liked and commented on the announcement! (Press release here: http://www.stjohns.ca/media-release/convention-centre-facade-artwork-selected#.UnaKRpXRksU.facebook) Sewing copies of Amelia and Reginald, gluing copies of Making Bread (not bombs) and printing, I’m getting ready for the next thing, the Book Arts Association NL’s Printers’ Fair on November 17th. The news is here: Printers’ Fair Artists and Craftspeople selling their wares: Books! Broadsides! Prints! Cards! Linocuts! Etchings! Lithographs! Letterpress! Sunday, November 17th, 2013 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. at The Rocket Room (upstairs at Rocket Bakery, 272 Water Street) Admission Free Exhibitors: John Andrews Graham Blair Caroline Clarke Janet Davis Lori Doody Jud Haynes Sonia Ho/ Alan Ho Philippa Jones Christine Koch Duncan Major Jennifer Morgan Janet Peter Krissie Worthman Running the Goat Books and Broadsides St. Michael’s Printshop Urchin Green Walking Bird Press Hosted by The Book Arts Association of Newfoundland and...
Whew!

Whew!

Whew! I finally (3 weeks later than planned) finished the last illustration for Amelia and Reginald today. Several in the second batch of drawings didn’t make good plates, so I had to rework them and send them back. Which left me further behind with the 2 baffling images, an Angel Choir, which Reginald is asked to imagine as he tries to wake Amelia from her comatic state, and Crossing the Alps in the style of 18th c. gentry, being carried in chairs. I have taken them out and put them away several times, but finally thought of trying to incorporate music into the choir image. Something funereal? After looking through the hymnal and on line, I decided on Swing Low, Sweet Chariot, a melody anyone who reads music is likely to recognize, and another non-18th c. element for the pseudo-ness of the book (like Micky and Minnie on Amelia’s bed). I also divided up the group to make the image more vertical to fill space at the end of the chapter, and changed their faces and poses a bit so they are not all playing instruments and they are all singing. The final bugaboo was the image of A&R crossing the Alps, being carried as gentlefolk were. It’s a double-wide illustration that will be folded and stitched in between signatures. Now to finish printing and start assembling! Here’s hoping everything else goes without...
Polymer Plates for Amelia and Reginald

Polymer Plates for Amelia and Reginald

I went to Corner Brook last Sunday to make polymer plates with the help of David Morrish at Dead Cat Press. We went to work Monday morning, and by the end of the day the plates were made for all the completed drawings. Tuesday I worked on this drawing, and we made the plate Wednesday evening. I drove home on Wednesday with a pile of plates ready to print! Spent Thursday and Friday getting ready for Open Studio this weekend, and this afternoon I printed 3 of the images onto the text pages, 110 or so copies of each. I’m hoping for an edition of...
Sketches

Sketches

Back to working on the illustrations for Amelia and Reginald. Here is Reginald, despondent and  refusing to eat. Where there is space at the ends of chapters, I am adding small illustrations to fill in. These are two sketches for Amelia’s wet clothes that she takes off in a room at an inn, after surviving a shipwreck. Neither of these is quite right, but none of the illustrations will be complex, detailed images. They are meant to suggest or be an echo rather than show minutiae… The luggage is for the chapter following, when the servants arrive with A&R’s luggage, and a new wig for Reginald. I haven’t worked on the illustrations for a week, and now see several things I want to change. It’s always good to back off for a bit and come back to a project with fresh...
illustrations

illustrations

While I am slowly assembling the edition of Making Books (not bombs), I have turned to completing a project that has languished in the studio for MUCH too long. My friend Rudolph Ellenbogen’s pseudo-eighteenth-century love story, The True History of Amelia and Reginald, has been off and on the back burner since 2005 (ouch!) when my brain shorted out while trying to grasp the style of the time (think Hogarth) and simulate it in my drawings. Over the past 8 years, I have taken it out, reread the story, looked at background material, and done sketches, only to tear my hair, rend my clothing, and vow to hie myself to a monastery to avoid confronting the sad realization that I am doomed to failure for false pride. I do love the story, and I do love my friend Rudolph and his lovely wife Alane, and having survived the struggle of creating Making Bread (not bombs), I feel up to taking a more equanimous view. I promised that the book would be finished in October, and to that end, I am keeping the drawings out in the dining room, where I can spread everything out on the table. I have sorted the illustrations and reference material into folders. To help keep myself focussed, I am going to add progress reports to my much-neglected blog. Below are the silhouettes for the frontispiece. I will scan and post more...

Making Bread (not bombs)

Finally assembling Making Bread (not bombs), my book for Al-Mutanabbi Street Starts Here and Book Art-Object IV. Five sections inkjet printed, laser cut and scored, then folded by hand and glued together, in a plain brown wrapper (Cave Paper) closed with linen twine. You can see a video of the laser cutter at work on...
Moving

Moving

Having spent much of the last month moving out of the space I had occupied since 1994, I am slowly organizing so the house doesn’t remain a holding area forever! With the help of a crane, a U-Haul truck, and two determined gentlemen, everything was moved. February is not the best time of year to be moving presses on salt-covered roads, but everything arrived in one piece. The last time the C&P was moved, we (meaning 2 friends and the 2 owners of the printshop who sold it- I watched and prayed) got it into and out of the truck from street level with a come along. I thought I would have heart failure watching that top-heavy thing sway as it was ratcheted up the ramp. The crane operator was fabulous, and the process of hooking up the presses and moving them was slow and graceful. Two flat files and the Kensol are in the living room, there are boxes everywhere, and I have about 4 square feet of wall space for painting, but I can reorganize a bit at a time. There is progress on the book front, but I will save that for another...