![]() A greater confidence with the material which helps to approach it with a balance between a deeper understanding and knowledge of the material but holding on to playful intuitive approach. What does all this mean: growing confidence and consolidating where I am at and where the work is moving. Wining awards, invitations to exhibit internationally, to attend residencies and demonstrate and lead workshops, inclusion in important publications about this medium. Also recently invited to show a selection of pieces along side ten other Scots and 11 Slovakian artists opening in Nitra State Museum and traveling to several further venues. I was also invited to a residency on the edge of Mount Fuji with five other international artists to go deeper into the medium and learn some new techniques but also old important ones like spending a whole day sharpening one tool! Great I loved it. Also I was invited to exhibit one of my 3D mokuhanga pieces at the Tokyo Metropolitan Museum -prints 21 exhibition. More recently, this new period of work has seen me travel back to Japan three times to attend both the International symposiums at Kyoto/Awaji and again in Tokyo. Studio with boxes, tubs and half-painted works. Finding new forms to wrap my woodblock prints around has opened up a whole new conceptual area for me. The Fjord series, coming out of a visit to Norway in 2007, shows another simple but decisive shift in my work. Rain started to appear in my work as an environmental response and continues to inhabit my thoughts. However, my concern for the ever-changing landscape and global warming is often there, if not always obvious. I hesitate to say that there are underlying themes to my work. There I started printing works based on gardens – both Japanese sand-raked and stone gardens, and floral gardens in Edinburgh. I began to work again, and in 2003 took up a short residency at the Center for Contemporary Printmaking in Connecticut, USA. My daughter, Silvie, was a year old at the time, and I spent a lot of time with her in the Botanic Gardens. I was absolutely shattered, depressed, and unable to work for a while. If you’re curious, there are notes about my approach and the process here.Ī couple of years after I returned from Japan, my studio, equipment and over a decade’s work were destroyed in Edinburgh’s Cowgate fire. Very briefly, the technique involves printing watercolour onto handmade Japanese paper, using a hand-held disc called a baren. I was, and still am, fascinated by the limitations of the process. I spent four years in Japan, studying Japanese and traditional woodblock techniques, finding a new way of expressing myself. It was an exhilarating if freaky time, ending in 46 of my paintings disappearing with an American art dealer. Events took me to Mexico where I painted angels, demons and masks in rich colours. I was motivated by a group of Japanese printmakers who I met at Peacock Visual Arts in Aberdeen where I was making large woodblocks in the early 1990s. I began watercolour woodblock printing (mokuhanga) on a scholarship to Tama Art University in Tokyo. This inherently beautiful and simple process has allowed my work to develop in a contemplative and semi-abstract way. I’m an Edinburgh-based artist, born Ellon, Scotland 1962.įor the last decade and more, I’ve been exploring traditional Japanese woodblock printing techniques. ![]()
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