Graphicstudio at IFPDA with a delicious James Rosenquist print from the 1970s--printed on two sheets of paper. I can't stop thinking about this print, which contains exciting, layered landscape space. Fair Link |
Can't remember where I saw this friendly print. |
Donald Baechler 2004 - so simple, but the complexity of surface a rich yield close to. |
Who? The period feel is enticing. |
A large, arresting Leonardo Drew also double-printed. |
Leonardo Drew detail: rich, dense, material! |
Lothar Osterburg with his mysterious diorama cityscape. |
Kiki Smith, a lanscape free from gravity, yet dense and detailed |
Detail, Kiki Smith |
Sam Francis |
Sam Francis |
Matisse, free as a bird |
Matisse |
Note to self: chunky color, incised surfaces, rich, cartoon-like, delicous! - Picasso linocut |
Elegant Marina Adams prints, large in internal scale, focusing on edge and transition |
Ultramarine shines, a transparent jewel in funky oxide mixtures |
Terry Winters, never fails to astound - grids within grids |
A simply gorgeous Kiki Smith, what looks like a log seen from above, but equally likely as a planet. |
Picasso, Ecce Homo (Apres Rembrandt), 1970 - late in life reviews |
Beatriz Milhazes, Flower Swing, 2019, Woodblock, screenprint, gold leaf, 33-3/4 x 37 inches |
A simply exquisite Lari Pittman |
And another, attesting to the freedom and experimentation so necessary in the printmaking process. |
Graffiti Sobre Ciment by Antoni Tapies - talk about material - echoing the Leonardo Drew |
Detail, Tapies surface |
Julian Opie from Luc and Ludivine get Married, 2007, laser cut silhouette, @ 17 x 15 inches |
William Crozier, Cafe, Aquatint |
Rikrit Tiravanija's We Can Travel to the sun when it is setting, 2013, etching, screenprint, metal foil, horse hair, STPI handmade abaca paper: WOW for texture! |
Detail - the juxtaposition of the metallic and the abaca thrills me to the marrow. |
Mickalene Thomas, whose collages and paintings feel timely and urgent right now on so many levels: feminine perspective, wallpapers and taste, race. |
The ever-amazing Judy Pfaff with details following. What a technician! |
Richard Dupont, 2013. These were big. The materiality and painterly surface felt exciting. |
The unceasingly great Joan Mitchell, iconic forever. She lived what she believed: freedom in landscape. |
I'd used this as a cover photo for a time, and it was thrilling to uncover this work IRL Joan Mitchell, translating form to material with prowess, confidence, and passion. |
Insertion, a Frankenthaler woodcut, exquisite in its lightness--she worked long and hard with a Japanese master printmaker to achieve the delicacy of edge, the perfect registration. |
Joan Mitchell. |
Note to self: Picasso linocuts. The color. The raw line. The incision. |
Picasso in situ. |
Frankenthaler. Tale of Genji I, 1998, 34-color woodcut created with a ukiyo-e trained Japanese carver. |
Swoon at the entrance--her work is so free, abundant. |
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