Monday, December 16, 2019

Lissette Diaz
Printmaking
Artists assessment
The piece by Peter Behrens located in Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) was done during 1898. The piece is untitled in LACMA but it is often referred to as “The Kiss”. Peter Beherns was born in Germany and originally studied for architect and design. He involved a lot of his work in the modernist movement.  Not much can be said about his early life, however, he did do the “Kiss” as a political statement in homophobia in the late 19th century, Germany. It is done in a wood print and was printed out in thin light brown paper with intricate design. Its dimensions are 11 x 8 inches and was published in a “magazine” for Berlin.
What intrigued me about this art piece was how Peter Beherns focused his whole career in his Architecture but began to use the expressionist movement as a way to express his disinterest in how Germany was dealing with Homophobia at the time. The piece is so tranquil and yet very provocative in its own way. It is not sexualizing the two women at all but it still gives the viewer a sense of sexual tension. It is extremely fascinating to look at, especially since it looks very simplistic. The main colors are browns and a hint of blue in the background. His work has inspired me in creating simplistic pieces which can still look successful and complete. His political views also inspired me to draw and illustrate work in topics that are important to me in this day and age. Although his focus was not in political work, he still took the time to address something which he deemed important to his life. Although much is not said about his life, I still find his work intriguing. 

Friday, December 13, 2019

My Love and Hate Relationship with Silkscreening by John


I attended a party at the beginning of this semester that had silkscreen artwork on display and it changed my perspective about the art form.  I wasn't enjoying the Art 70 class.  There were so many steps to follow with a bunch of new vocabulary that I had remember or risk being corrected. It's not paint, it's ink!  They're not paintings they are prints! I don't like to get dirty either but the more tidy I tried to be the dirtier I would get. I was counting down til the end of the semester cursing I would never print again.

Attending this party was almost like a higher calling.  I probably should have been more social but I couldn't believe the quantity and quality of the silkscreen collection of Liechtenstein and Warhol museum replicas.   It was the bold primary colors that gave life to thick outlined shapes and figures.  The bendy dots enhance the frame with a comic book tone that caught me eye the most. This is where my idea for City of Angeles 2.0 was conceived.   I learned that it doesn't have to be perfect.  I can paint outside the lines and I don't have to know how to draw.  There is no right or wrong.  I was impressed by the command presence of each print.  I like how each piece can command a board room or a museum wall by itself but to see so much quality prints at once made me feel drunk on creativity.  I felt a sense of drunkenness of inspiration overflowing with possibilities. It was as if each print was an enhanced frame within comic book strip. It was this moment that gave me a better understanding that I don't have to learn how to draw or paint. 


I still wasn't sure if I liked silkscreening but after investing so much money into equipment and supplied, I began to explore the idea of enrolling in the Advanced Printing class.  The moment that made me appreciate silkscreening during my final project phase.  I was struggling to create a composite concept that could be combined with my final project in Photo 37 Portrait class.  It was a creative risk but I wanted to combine an original concept for my final but also for real world application.  My company is tasked to record video and audio interviews of television show creators but I am experimenting with a portfolio of narrative portraits expressed in silkscreen and digital prints.

Wednesday, December 11, 2019

Andy Warhol's Self-Portrait


Hi Everyone!


I took a weekend and went to The Broad in Los Angeles to view some of Andy Warhol's work, specifically one of his 'Self Portrait’ pieces. It's one of the most iconic and well-known self-portrait pieces from his self-portrait series. It looks like the process was done by placing half tone images of himself on top of blocks of colors, which was a very popular method he used for many of his works, including the infamous Marilyn Monroe print. I like this print because he seems to be gazing out of the canvas, almost like he is staring at the audience and is wondering what they’re thinking, or perhaps judging the audience. Additionally, the dense and vibrant colors he chose to use work perfectly and all compliment each other beautifully. 

Although some of Warhol’s most famous works are screen prints, Warhol was a renaissance man when it came to art. He worked with a variety of mediums including screen printing, photography, film, sculpture, drawing, and painting. He was born in Pittsburgh, and pursued a career as a commercial illustrator which led him to receive some recognition and eventually sparked him to create his own art studio, The Factory. The Factory was well known gathering place for all types of people including drag queens, hollywood celebrities, etc. and he created most of his most famous works there. 

To be honest, I used to look at prints all over and never cared for them because I didn’t understand the process behind them. Now knowing what I know, seeing Warhol’s prints again is unbelievably inspiring. I plan to use his half tone method of printing in the near future.




Hello class!

I decided to go to the Getty and look at all the fine art that was up there near Westwood and Santa Monica. Claude Monet was an amazing French painter that had many different paintings under his belt. He had one series in particular that stood out to me, which was the Rouen Cathedral. This subject that he painted was one of great interest to Monet. He painted this building in different settings and angles over 30 times! All incredibly done and in a way that was magically put together, almost like a mixture of abstract and impressionist.

The reason I decided to focus on this pairing that was in the Getty was due to the fact that this particular building was made into 30+ different paintings. This got me thinking about how doing something like that is similar to the way we make out prints when we want to have several editions. He in essence made a series of editions for the Rouen Cathedral. The color pallets for each of the different editions are each unique. The piece I was able to see in the flesh was a grey blue, yellow, and while color pallet mainly.

Tuesday, December 10, 2019

"The Handling is in Your Hands"


Sister Mary Corita Kent was born in November 20, 1918. She was sister of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, where she joined when she was only 18 years old. She studied at the Chouinard Art Institute, then transferred to the University of Southern California where she found a passion for screen printing. One day, in 1962, Sister Corita Kent took some students to view an Andy Warhol exibit. From that day on her view of art was revolutionized and she began to create her own pop art. In the 60's she became well known for her many pop art prints which mashed together Warhol's style and social justice. Her prints were always brightly colored, bold and iconic. For example in the year before her death she designed a stamp with the word "love". That stamp sold over 700 million copies. Corita always used her art as a tool for activism and those prints could be used to this day. I had the great opportunity of viewing one of Corita Kents prints at MOCA this passed spring.
"The Handling Is In Your Hands" was made in 1966 and is a 30x35 print. Corita printed text red and light blue and has a block color in red as well. It portrays a very pop art vibe with its simplicity and use of space.
What I liked about this print was the use of text as a character. The words werent straight across as would be expected, yet the text has movement and some are even upsidedown. These elements create a chaotic piece yet it works and captures your attention. This piece inspired me to try more typography art and think about text as a character in itself.



Anna Embree is a professor at the university of Alabama for the MFA Book Arts Program in the School of Library and Information Studies. Professor Embree has been teaching bookbinding and letterpress printing courses at The University of Alabama since in the fall of 2004. Her prior experience was teaching book arts courses for The University of Iowa. Professor Embree teaches courses and workshops in bookbinding, box making, and special topics in book preservation and book history. She also has strong interest in physical and material aspects of book structures. While she also has collaborated with printers and papermakers on limited edition handmade books, and has exhibited widely. I saw her work at the Long Beach Museum of Art.
Professor Embrees work was about 2 inches wide but 4inches wide if I had to take a guess. She mainly used black, red, and green, but used blue in one of the prints. Letterpress printed cards on Stonehenge paper and a letterpress printed French paper wrapper, was composed by letterpress. Her work seems to have a darkish theme to it, kind of in an evil sense but not too evil. I see a hand with mouth in the palm area with a fork behind it. A tree with rootish vibes and a pac man looking charter right next to it. A boot with roots growing into the ground vining as shoe laces with a leaf at the end. An alchemist with a yoyo and a ruler as a body with a head throwing up a ruler at the bottom.
Her work inspired me to try to keep my work to a few layers with a few colors. Her worked made me feel a cool darkish vibe. We didn’t explore letter press in class but I thought it looks pretty cool kind of reminds me of using rubylith or matte dura-lar.

Monday, December 9, 2019

Mono Lake V by Joseph Corso

I decided to check out Joseph Corso’s art gallery,who is a classmate of mine, that was a part of the LBOpen Studio Tours. Joseph presented his works art at his own house, which I found very nice and well presented. He had some very beautiful paintings of places that could be found in the LA county. He also had a few prints in display and seeing his work presented in the gallery and his prints in class; it’s clear that he is a very talented artist. 


Joseph is a Southern California native that has spent most of his life being a landscape printer. He attended the Art department of Cal State Long Beach in where he majored in painting in 1980 and decided to further his knowledge in printmaking as well. After that he started making a career from painting and lithography. His private and public collections can be found through out the country. Joseph has won awards in the national juried shows and was active in the LA County Museum of Art’s rental program. 


The art piece that I found very interesting was “Mono Lake V”, which is a landscape print of a lake in front and the mounts out into the distance where the lake ends. I like this one a lot because of the realism that the print looks. I feel like if I was there at the place where Joseph drew the painting. I also like very much the season in which the painting is drawn which is seemed to be winter.

MEMENTO: AN ANTHOLOGICAL EXHIBITION BY TOMÁS OCHOA

I visited the Museum of Latin American Art. Tomas Ochoa’s exhibition known as Memento: An Anthropological Exhibition really caught my attention. Tomas Ochoa. Was born in Ecuador but lives and works in Columbia today. His work captures the anthropological view of the various effects on the local landscape and its inhabitants. He shows how he is interested in the symbolic change in the environment that is shown in these landscapes.
The entire exhibit consisted of sixteen large panels that depicted Columbia’s landscape, architecture, and people. They were all done in the same medium (gunpowder on canvas), being black and white, and all were very large. The particular work that I liked was a landscape and was 94 1/2 inches by 189 inches. It was on a wall all by itself with no other works near it. The piece is a polyptych which is a painting, typically an altarpiece, consisting of more than three leaves or panels joined by hinges or folds. This particular piece was cut into four vertical panels and the entire image in itself was horizontal. This piece shows a river or a stream intersecting with trees and the forest in nature. I believe the artist is trying to show how nature appears to him where he lives using an uncommon medium.

I really like this piece and how it looks like a black and white photograph. I also enjoy anytime of landscape pieces in general because that is what I like to create as well. It was very interesting to see just how much detail went into this piece. It was interesting to look at both close up and far away. Different things were seen and noticed at different depths the more I looked at it. This could almost be similar to a half toned image in printmaking with the scene composed of a bunch of tiny dots. I really enjoyed seeing this on such a large scale and it makes me want to do bigger prints.




Sunday, December 8, 2019

"Al Norte y Patras" series by Alvaro D. Marquez

 

El Coyote, from Al Norte y Patras Series
22''x30'' Linoleum print on stonehenge, black ink
by Alvaro D. Marquez

The Self Help Graphics and Art center in East LA held their annual printmaking sale in which I came across a series of prints depicting common situations experienced by undocumented laborers. The artist, Alvaro D. Marquez drew his inspiration from his childhood. Marquez grew up in Salinas, California in a community of immigrant farm and working class laborers. Marquez was exposed to many social issues and racism throughout his childhood that most first generation children face which ultimately served as an inspiration in his artwork. The artist is inspired by comics and story telling and is very evident in his dynamic prints.

Out of the 12 prints in his Al Norte y Patras series, El Coyote was one of the more animated prints that I enjoyed looking at. The name Al Norte y Patras translates to "to the north and back". The print depicts a man paying a coyote money. This is humorous to me because obviously El Coyote is a colloquial term for people that smuggle migrants to the U.S.for a fee. Marquez decided to use the image of an actual coyote for the sake of story telling. Although the print is in black and white, the artist was successful at utilizing his space with different types of details and seeming textures. I love the simplicity of the image and the artist usage of caricatures which ultimately does a great job at bringing about the artists personality.


Janeth Briceno, 12/08/19



Emergence of the Kelp Deer

Chromgenic Print on Sintra


Christine Nguyen

Exhibit: B.A.T. State III: Women Artists In Conversation with El Nopal Press, at CSULB

This group showing of Nopal Press’ collaborations with many artists over the years, mostly lithographs but also including other media and monotypes, was inspiring in that it showed the amazing range that is possible in printmaking. I appreciate the fact that only women artists were included here, as women have often been marginalized in art history.

Of course, I was drawn to the largest piece in the exhibit, a massive dreamscape by Christine Nguyen, Emergence of the Kelp Deer, It is composed of fifty 2-foot-square images. Each image was drawn by hand on Mylar with ink, watercolor, and salt solution, creating a variety of colors and textures. They were then treated as photographic negatives and exposed onto film to create a reverse of the image, where white becomes black and colors become their opposite. The result is fantastical and mysterious, and truly dreamlike. The iridescent effect reminds me of jellyfish bodies.

I love the idea of using individual prints, in any medium, to create a monumental piece, in this case one 20 feet wide! The fact that the individual squares do not all line up with each other in their details only adds vibrancy and reminds us of the process. They still come together as one cohesive image.



Joseph Corso