Max Klinger (1857-1920), 'Die Sirene' (The Siren), 1920
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Max Klinger (1857-1920), 'Die Sirene' (The Siren), 1920
marching orders
9x12” • copper plate etching
✴︎⭒ hydrogen & oxygen: we're all just atoms so watch me go supernova! coyote, barred owl, moths and berries, algae, and a transformation; copperplate etching with hard ground and aquatint ⭒𖹭
The Cleveland Museum of Art keeps Charles Émile Jacque's "Young Woman Bathing" in its print collection. You won't see it on the wall unless you ask. That's how prints departments work. Etchings live in solander boxes, pulled out for study, rotated into brief exhibitions before going back into the dark. Light is the enemy - UV fades ink, kills the tonal range that makes a print worth looking at. And this etching from around 1866 lives on tonal range. The crosshatching builds shadow in four or five distinct densities, from open parallel lines on the illuminated belly to tight layered meshes under the raised arm. Jacque is remembered for painting sheep. But he produced over 450 etching plates. This bather stands in classical contrapposto, one hand in her hair, the other at her chin, vegetation at her feet suggesting a riverbank. No Venus, no myth. Just a woman, a copper plate, and a sharp needle. The plate number - "No. 38 _ 3" - sits in the upper left corner, cataloguing her like a specimen. Even the filing system has something to say about how we look at bodies. Quelle: meisterdrucke.com
First time working with monoprints in intaglio. Had a wild time trying to finish these all quickly.
These are based of these sketches. And these 1, 2 plates.
The first one is inspired from Dark Souls 3, while the second is Onryo AU (TMNT 2012) inspired. The third is completely original
A trying of the copper plate printing!
Stedmen Whitwell, Fonthill Abbey: The Grand Drawing-room, from John Rutter’s Delineations of Fonthill Abbey, 1823, copper plate engraving.
Leszek Rózga, "Temptation III or Eve", 1990