Showing posts with label missouri landscape. Show all posts
Showing posts with label missouri landscape. Show all posts

Thursday, January 2, 2014

sid kamprath - ne collector

Sundown, detail 1. Double click on image to enlarge.
Horizon south of Carrollton, Missouri.
Sundown, detail 2.
Burlington Northern train eastbound,
Ray Carroll elevator silhouette.
Sundown, detail 3.
Fields south of the city of Carrollton,
downtown courthouse silhouette.
 
Sundown painting on wall. 
Acrylic painting measures
11" tall by 45 " wide.
It was painted in 2003.
Above painting "Sundown by Karl Marxhausen"
with collector Sid Kamprath of Seward, Nebraska.

Above painting, "Playskool by Karl Marxhausen."
An acrylic tribute to my father, Reinhold Marxhausen,
based on black and white photograph my father took.
Sid Kamprath is the Marketing Director of
Laminating Wood Systems, Inc. and
owner of Summit Design, based in Seward, Nebraska.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

afternoon shade linocut

After doing Moss Creek #1 for the Print Exchange, I sought to add cows by the water. Here are the June pencil sketches in my notebook. Some have black marker added.   Double click on image to see it larger.                      














My pencil notes on June 2nd reminded me: Use colors similiar to ones used by Frances Gearhart "On Big Bear Lake"






 








Here are colors I thought I would use:
black-yellow (green) block
black-white (mid grey) block
yellow-white block
black-white-yellow (olive) block














When I had time to daydream about the design I changed my mind. Perhaps I would use these colors instead: yellow----lt.olive (lit trees)---red brown (pond)---dk green (trees)---lt blue base












Pencil drawings of plants in my neighbor's field gave me plant forms to cut on the linoleum blocks.





I thought I could mix greens using yellow and black, like the days I did when I did the Carrollton mural. But when I mixed both Speedball yellow with black I was disappointed. It produced gray-yellows. The yellow was not as pure as I had hoped. Instead it had a lot of white mixed in to it.

 




A fellow print
maker gave me an idea. I made thumb-nail smudges of color in a scrapbook, starting with a base Speedball color and adding certain acrylic colors to it. For instance, a yellow Speedball base and an acrylic cerulean blue hue. I took the time, experimented mixing colors, and came up with the charts below. This gave me a ballpark of colors to work from.
















In June I finished cutting all the linoleum blocks in the five-block set. Based on my notes I mixed ink and made trial proofs of the linocut (below).







 
 
 


Here are samples of the colors I mixed from that batch. Not all the blocks lined up like I wanted them to.
In July I used ink to make new color schemes (below). I smeared ink on paper. Then, over the course of a couple weeks, I looked at them, thinking, thinking, thinking. At last I picked out the colors I wanted to mix for Afternoon Shade.
 








This was the scheme I chose. Next I would mix these colors on my brayer palette.










In August I inked and hand-pulled nine individual prints from the five blocks.They would be trial proofs. The nine did not turn out "alike enough" to be an edition.
















For alignment purposes the orange block was pushed up from the baseline. (see next photo)

Each time after I inked the yellow portion of the block I placed a paper cutout over it.

 










The yellow portion and the orange portion were cut on the same block.

They were inked separately. 

The block was washed off after a color was finished being used.



After inking the blue block, a paper cutout mask was placed over it before making a print from it.
 

Click video to see blue block printed. 
Here is what the block print looked like after that. There are nine prints made like this. Some aligned better than others. This was how I find out how to lay the blocks out on the registration board. Through trial and error.

The green block was inked.
 

Click on video to see green block printed.

This was what the four colors looked like.
 

Click on video. Each inked block was washed off in the sink after I was done printing all the prints I was doing for that day. The green block was scrubbed with a brush and tap water. That was what I liked about water soluble ink:)

To make this top color I mixed my blue base with a white base and a dab of Raw Umber acrylic paint from the tube.




 

Click on video to see ink mixed on brayer palette.
This was the last and top block to be printed on all nine sheets. 

Compare the cut design with pencil drawings above. 

Can you see which plant patterns I cut out? 

Can you see the cow? 

How many cows were in the original design?

Of the nine hand-pulled prints two were selected for my woodcut show at the Lincoln Burkholder Project Gallery. The set of nine was not really an edition.They are not all the same, and so I think of them as monoprints, or one-of-a-kind.
Double click on image to see larger. I love the lighter colors. 

Afternoon Shade measures 4 by 6 inches. It is a color linocut. It is printed on 75 gsm eucalyptus bond paper. It is in a white mat.