View allAll Photos Tagged ScreenPrint
This was a screenprint of at least six colors that I did for Domy Booksâ first Monster Show in 2006. This is supposed to be a zombie so I did a lot of research by watching a lot of zombie films.
As part of Glasgowâs Active Ageing Week, a community group from 'Keep Creative', an arts and health GP referral programme, run by Depot Arts in North Glasgow took part in our âGrowing Bolderâ Printmaking and Archive Project.
This print was selected from the Glasgow Print Studio Archive by Alice from the Depot Arts Group.
âI call this print Smoking Gun because I find it very, striking portraying the dangers of living in Countries like Mexico where writers end up imprisoned, tortured, disappear, or are killed for speaking out. It shouts out a warning of the peril faced by anyone who dares to exercise freedom of speech, a right taken for granted by the Western World.â
Alice
Screenprint on canvas. Expo 'Overname' preparations. Been living in the screenprint studio for quite a few days.
The stamp will help guide visitors upstairs to the modern masterpieces from SFMOMA's collection, on view in the exhibition "Beyond Belief."
Shots from the opening night of the Xynthetic Carbon & Chemicals show at it's final destination in Workshop, Bristol
See what the Carbon & Chemicals tour was all about, check out the 'Retrospective' video on Vimeo @ www.vimeo.com/863482
My first screenprint using a monotype method of applying color directly onto the screen and then printing with a transparent base to fix the pigment. I had some issues.
Guides all took turns screen printing the camp logo on a piece of calico for a camp blanket badge and their choice of a pillow slip or bag. Some girls and leaders are making fantastic collections of screen prints on their camp pillow case.
The making of work for an upcoming group show I'm in at the ACP (Australian Centre of Photography) gallery in Sydney entitled 'Batteries Not Included'
More info at izrock.
This series of 6 combination hand drawn and screen-printed collage pieces contain a world inside a small apartment. The repetitive nature of routines and habits associated with domestic life manifest them selves physically through a multiplication of household objects and a doubling and tripling of the figured character.
This is a unique work.