The Weekly Volcano, May 29, 2014
Janet Marcavage, Heap, 2013. Screenprint
on rag paper, 28 x 22 ¼
inches.
Collection of the artist.
|
Dionne Haroutunian, Connection from the Outside My Helmet series, 2011. Etching, archival digital print, 22 x 30 inches. Collection of the artist. |
Prints are not what they used to be. Not that
artists do not still make etchings, lithographs and silkscreen prints, but what
they do with these and other print media — often in inventive and
never-before-thought-of combinations and employing new digital technologies —
can be like nothing ever before seen.
Frank
Janzen makes prints using smoke, Dionne Haroutounian combines print media and
collage is ways that are almost indefinable, and Janet Marcavage creates
sparkling optical prints using traditional media. These are but a few of the
new and exciting works by Northwest printmakers to be seen in the new
exhibition “Ink This!” at Tacoma Art Museum.
This
survey of Northwest printmakers opening June 7 includes approximately 85 works
of art by more than 70 talented Northwest print artists. Included are works by Rick
Bartow, Ben Beres, Amanda Knowles, Susan Lowdermilk, Rae Mahaffey, Hibiki
Miyazaki, Tyna Ontko, Barbara Robertson, Charles Spitzack, Jessica Spring,
Christy Wyckoff, plus Janzen, Haroutounian, Marcavage and many more.
Let’s
look at just one of these as an example. Marcavage, who teaches art at
University of Puget Sound, puts together bands of color that seem to fold and
pulse and optically rise off the wall. “My
hand-pulled screenprints on paper reference the topography of lines following
the form of fabric. In this work I draw relationships between the process of
weaving and the underlying construction of line-mapped imagery,” she states on
her website at www.janetmarcavage.com.
Other
works in the exhibition showcase a wide variety of printmaking techniques, from
traditional print media to installation and digital media. It includes
letterpress artists and artists who create handmade books that are in essence
small sculptures. A museum spokesperson says there is a surprising variety of
creative technique and tools that question the definition of print in
contemporary art practice, and how that definition is challenged as artists
push the boundaries of the medium.
Throughout
the 20th century and continuing into the 21st, print art
has been a strong part of the Northwest art scene. The museum states that “print
arts are as indicative of the Pacific Northwest’s artistic identity as salmon
and microbrew are identified with regional food culture.”
"The
contemporary print arts community in the Northwest is both lively and varied
and incredibly supportive of individual expression,” says curator Margaret
Bullock, sharing her enthusiasm about the show. “While working on this
exhibition I got to see etchings that could have been made centuries ago
alongside works that combine printmaking with new technology and everything in
between. I also got to meet a group of artists who were as excited about the
work of other printmakers as they were their own, even if they were worlds
apart in their interests and aesthetics. I hope that ‘Ink This!’ will surprise, excite, and inspire while honoring the
creativity and enthusiasm that make the print arts a rich and vital part of the
Northwest art community."
Microbrewing
is another outstanding Northwest tradition, and Tacoma Art Museum has collaborated
with Harmon Brewing Company to craft a signature ale, amusingly named “drINK THIS,” a name which cleverly plays on
the title of the exhibition. Harmon Brewing Co.’s co-owner Pat
Nagel describes the IPA as having "bold flavors of orange, lemon and melon
(that) give way to a crisp, clean and smooth finish.” The ale will be available
at special museum events, on tap at the Harmon’s four restaurants, and sold in
20 ounce bottles at the museum’s cafe.
Many
related events will be held at the museum in conjunction with the show,
including the “Lunch and Learn” series featuring discussions with curator
Margaret Bullock on Wednesday June 4 at 11 a.m. Additional programs and events
will be announced on the museum’s website at www.TacomaArtMuseum.org.
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