Visiting Artist: GW Bot

September 13, 2006

The artist at work, cutting linoblocks.

In this second half of the year our visiting artist is GW Bot, prominent Australian printmaker who has done some incredible things with the medium of linocut printing.

Bot is coming in one day a week to work on a limited edition artist’s book to be called Black Swan. The book uses three translations of a Russian poem about Australia by Konstantin Dmitrievich Bal’mont (1867-1942): English, Russian and Bot’s own visual ‘language’ (an example of which is pictured below, as linocuts ready for proofing).

the linocuts ready for proofing

The English text will be handset in Times roman (below), and the Russian has been cast on photopolymer plates, to be printed as relief plates on the letterpress press.

text in progress

We are at the point of proofing the plates and text, and if all goes well, the book will be ready and bound by late November. The edition is expected to be 12 copies.


Open Day

August 23, 2006

The ANU School of Art is having an Open Day on this Saturday, August 26 from 9am to 4pm, along with the rest of the university.

The Book Studio, upstairs in the Printmedia & Drawing Workshop, will be open and operational, and there will numerous activities throughout the Workshop itself, including demonstrations of various print techniques, a print sale, t-shirt sale, plate-drawing stall and a sausage sizzle.

The Book Studio has been printing cloth serviettes to add to the sausage sizzle, cut from white cotton drill and printed with letterpress ink (which, from long experience, does not wash out!). Here are a few samples:

fynger gunne

messy etc

yes

no

We’ve also printed a few items of clothing, just for fun.

clothes

Open Day is a fantastic way to see the School of Art in operation. There are activities happening in all workshops: Printmedia, Photomedia, Painting, Ceramics, Glass, Textiles, Furniture, Gold & Silversmithing, and Sculpture. There is also the judging of the annual Student Drawing Prize in the Gallery, as well as many opportunities to buy or win artworks.

If you’re in the Canberra region, this is a great way to spend your Saturday, no matter the weather.


Introduction to Letterpress

August 16, 2006

Recently the Book Studio held two small one-day workshops on letterpress, taught by Caren Florance. Designed as a quick introduction to setting type, each group set a block of type each, had it printed on cylinder proofing press and came away with a few copies of a small chapbook that they could bind at their own leisure. The majority of participants were members of the ACT Craft Bookbinders Guild.

quiet typesetting

You could have heard a pin drop in the room while they concentrated on getting the right letters out of the typecases…

The first workshop was on Sunday 6 August, with 6 participants. The theme of their chapbook was ‘Ampersand’, with text on the origins and usage of the symbol, with a couple of poems on the same theme.

drying on the rack

A freshly printed page, drying on the rack

The second workshop was on Thursday 11 August, with 5 participants, and their theme was ‘Alphabet’. They each set a block of prose or poetry, and Caren filled the centre of the chapbook with an alphabet of wood type.

alphabet proof

A proof of an Alphabet page, printed in brown

Because of the limited amount of type, each block of text was set in a different font, but to contain the design we kept the font size at 12pt. The chapbooks were printed mostly on Magnani Laid paper offcuts with a small number on thick Arches paper. Sunday’s class chose to print their type in black, while Thursday’s class chose a dark brown ink.

4-page imposition

A 4-page imposition, using a 4-section chase

Participants learned about publication planning, letterpress measurements, setting type, moving type, locking up, imposition, and using the press. Most importantly, they also took the time to put their type away, which is one of the most important parts of the endeavour!

dissing

Dissing the type (aka putting it away)

The workshops went well. Everyone worked very hard, seemed to have a good time, and a lot was achieved with just one day. Plans are afoot for more workshops, and possibly a letterpress night course. If you would like to participate in such a course or workshop, please contact the Book Studio by email: eabs[at]anu[dot]edu[dot]au

POSTSCRIPT: Images of the actual chapbooks have now been posted at the Book Studio flickr page. For the ABC chapbook, follow this link. For the Ampersand Chapbook, follow this link.


Bread and Love: Hossein Valamanesh

August 2, 2006

Hossein Valamanesh in the Book Studio

In 1st Semester 2006, the School of Art Painting Workshop hosted Hossein Valamanesh as an Artist in Residence. During his residency he wanted to work with large pieces of unleavened bread and sought a way of flattening his bread under weights. Somehow his search led him to the Book Studio, and our large drying cabinet. Over the next month or so Hossein became an informal but regular visitor to the Studio, trying different ways to dry, flatten and then mount the pieces so that they could be framed without falling apart.

Hossein used the bread as a canvas to paint with pure saffron mixed to an ‘ink’ with water. He painted very elaborate Sufi calligraphy, spelling the word ‘love’ over and over. When I questioned this, he replied ‘Bread and Love — everybody needs it, every day’. Some of the bread pieces worked, others fell apart, which instigated a whole other way of looking at the work, and will lead to ongoing explorations. Towards the end of his stay, we ate a few pieces of the fragments, and the taste of the pure saffron was such a wonderful experience that he used a number of the pieces as an ‘eat your art out’ feature of his farewell party.

Hossein enjoyed the Book Studio so much that he used the letterpress equipment to produce a small edition called ‘In Praise of the Beloved’, which had two almonds in their shells adorned with fake eyelashes attached to the paper with the title printed underneath in handset letterpress. Deceptively simple, and very beautiful, like so much of his work.

Bread and Love

(top image: Hossein at work with saffron while John Pratt prints in the background. Bottom image: bread in progress.)


Something to think about

August 2, 2006

If books had been invented after the computer, they would have been considered a big breakthrough. Books have several hundred simultaneous paper-thin, flexible displays. They boot instantly. They run on very low power at a very low cost.

Prof. Joseph M. Jacobson, MIT Media Lab, quoted in the N. Y. Times, Apr 8, 1988, page B2.


Voyages of Recovery

July 31, 2006

True Blue and White, 2005

Dr Danie Mellor, former staff member of the Edition + Artist Book Studio, has an exhibition opening at the Canberra Museum and Gallery from 6 August to 22 October: Voyages of Recovery or An Ongoing Catalogue with Moments of Reason from the Cabinet.

The opening is on Friday 4 August at 6pm 5.30pm. (apologies for not reading the card properly!)
Image: True Blue and White, 2005, mixed media.


Paperform pop-up magic

July 31, 2006

For anyone interested in paper construction and pop-up books, check out this wonderful Australian site called Paperform (bandwidth warning: it is very slow to load, even with a fast server. But the wait is worth it!). For more on Paperform’s creator, Benja Harney, see this article. Maybe click this link first to see if you want to wait for the other site!

And while I’m on this topic, Peter Callesen (below) is another fantastic paper artist, based in  Denmark. His website is exquisite.

Peter Callesen papercut ladder


Under the Cover

July 31, 2006

Bookbinding Exhibition Australia (BEA) is planning its next exhibition, Under the Cover, to be held at the Stanton Library in North Sydney from November 2006 to the end of January 2007.

They invite bookbinders and others who make books to take a broad view of the title and create a binding that represents what they see under the cover — be it under the quilt cover, the book cover, or even the cover of darkness. Inspiration might be found in quilting material and methods, or this aspect can be disregarded all together. However participants choose to interpret Under the Cover, BEA anticipate this will be an exciting exhibition of diverse bookbinding methods and styles. They hope to attract a broad group of participants for this exhibition.

The Stanton Library is organising an exhibition of heritage Australian quilts, from Annette Gero’s collection, to be held at the same time as Under the Cover. Even though the exhibitions will be in separate spaces, there are similarities and differences between the two and they have chosen the exhibition title with that in mind.

More information is available on the BEA website http://bookbindingexhibitions.com.au


We know who we are

July 28, 2006

we know who we are

Bernie Slater is a graduate from the ANU School of Art Printmedia & Drawing Workshop, and is one of the current Alumni-in-Residence in the Book Studio.

His latest work, We know who we are (pictured) is a massive 4-section banner silkscreen on paper. It’s showing as part of a group show called Octopus 6: We know who we are in Melbourne at Gertrude Contemporary Art Space in Melbourne until 18 August 2006. The show then moves to the Gippsland Art Gallery in Sale, Victoria from 26 August to 17 September 2006.

This print has also been selected for the new Social Commentary Prize based at Warrnambool. I’ll post more details on that when I get them.


WIPE

July 26, 2006

For anyone into Mail Art projects here’s a fun print one:

Field Study presents: WIPE - Light-weight bookwork

Produce a print edition of 40 on toilet paper (any type). It’s an open theme, any print technique allowed, including rubber stamps and typewriting. (No organic materials or traces allowed!) Max size: 14 x 11 cm. The sheets are stapled at one side, at the left, so take this into account when you work out your page design.
This is an ongoing project, with no deadline. The co-ordinator waits until 20 participants have sent editions in, then compiles 40 booklets and sends each artist a copy. The other copies are sold to institutions and artist-book collectors, and some are given away as gifts.

Field Study is a non-profit organization and all monies raised are ploughed back into the Field for future projects.

Address: Field Study, P.O. Box 1838, Geelong VIC 3220 Australia.

[I have sent a few editions off to this project. Its been going for ages, by the looks of it, and has a lot of international participants. The first time I sent one off, the booklet was #35 in the series, and that was a couple of years ago! You can print, sew, paste, and type. It gets pretty addictive, and it totally changes the way you look at toilet paper when you walk through the supermarket...]