Saturday, April 25, 2009

April Final Friday

Last Friday we were able to participate in the Final Friday Gallery Crawl as the featured artist in Springpark Gallery in Clifton Square. With such a great evening and perfect weather it is hard to believe that only a month ago it got cancelled by the blizzard! The art aficionados were out in force. It is amazing how the arts scene has sprung to life in Wichita! It's a good thing, not only for Wichita and the artists, but for the young crowd, who for so long have complained about there not being interesting things to do in Wichita. With Final Friday and now First Friday Music events, the Downtown and Old Town have come alive. It's great!
"1881 Spring Hill Ranch"
An Original Etching
My First Sale
Tall and stately,
it has watched as fortunes and fads have come and gone,
generations age and youth leave for brighter horizons...
Yet, through it all, the grasses, the hills,
and the sky have remained constant and eternal.
Stephen M. Perry

Thursday, April 16, 2009

Looking forward to the Symphony in the Flint Hills
For the past four years I have had the opportunity to work with the Symphony in the Flint Hills organization on illustrations for their program book. Talk about a great event! The Symphony in the Flint Hills is a world class event that Kansas can be proud of! It's too bad that tickets are so limited and hard to get. Tickets go on sale early in April and usually sell out in one day, but I just now visited their web site, www.symphonyintheflinthills.org, and they are saying tickets are still available, but the site may not have been updated since April 9th. Check it out if you are interested.Spend some time on the prairie,

Learn to recognise subtle variations of the bluestem prairie grasses.

Notice the myriad wildflowers and critters of the grasslands.

There is some real beauty to be found everywhere.

Stephen M. Perry

Thursday, April 9, 2009

New Proof Print
Today was a printing day to finish up an edition started earlier and to proof the new etching plate that I have been working on in the past week. The image below is from the plate done from the drive up Carnahan Creek Road north of Manhattan. The title of the print will be "Above Otter Creek". There's still some work to do on the plate, such as polishing the beveled edges so that they don't catch ink and print dark like the image below. I am also trying to decide if I will do an aquatint on the ground surfaces to give them some tone. The line work was successful and I hate to take a chance on messing up the image with bad aquatint. I may go ahead and print a small run without aquatint and then try it so that I will at least have a small edition.


"Above Otter Creek" Proof Print

From the pavement to the pasture

the track is rutted and muddy,

but for the cattleman the way is the life he has chosen...

He is the steward of the cattle, the land and the Bluestem grasses,

but above all he is the steward of independence and hard work.

Stephen M. Perry

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

Just a Studio Day
I just got back from a Botanica Children's Garden Steering Committee meeting. Fundraising is still underway, but the project is shaping up to be a great and exciting addition to Botanica and a wonderful attraction for Wichita. Stop in to Botanica and find about the project and how you can be a part of making it happen.
Tomorrow will be a printing day. Today will be spent matting and framing prints for the upcoming Wichita Book and Art Fair on May 9th and 10th. It will be our first art fair since the early '80s. Exciting, but lots of work to prepare enough prints to hang a decent show and have replacements for all of the prints we plan to sell! Damn the economy and full speed ahead!
Real happiness is not related to wealth.
It resides in the joy of achievement
and the therapy of creative expression.
Stephen M. Perry

Monday, April 6, 2009

Another Print from the Backroads Gallery
Since I spent today dealing with issues other than printmaking, like trying to find that right person to help me take my web site to the next level, I thought I would post another of my etchings from a drive through the southern portion of the Flint Hills. These Daylilies were found growing in the ditch along the side of the road just north of Silverdale, in Cowley County, Kansas.

"Lilies of Days Past"

An Original Etching by Stephen Perry

Leftovers from some past pioneer's connection to civilization,

escapees from a farm wife's tended flower border

or runaways from the community down the road...

The ditch Daylilies remind us of times past

and brighten the day's drive.

Stephen M. Perry

Sunday, April 5, 2009

The Etching Process

The copper plate, grounded and scribed in earlier posts, has been etched in a Ferric Chloride and Citric Acid solution, called Edinburgh Etch, in a series of seven steps totaling one hour and forty minutes. The etching solution is a corrosive salt that eats into the copper that is exposed in the scribed lines. The entire plate is etched in the first step and then the lines desired to be the lightest are stopped out, or painted over with a lacquer-type solution. At each step some of the lines are stopped out with the result being a series of line darkness from dark bold to light, giving the illusion of depth in the scene. The lines that are etched the longest are eaten deeper into the plate and, as a result, will hold more ink and print bolder.



The Etched and Cleaned Plate is Inspected

Once the etching is considered complete, the stop-out solution is removed with alcohol, the hard ground is removed with paint thinner, the plate is cleaned and inspected. Additional work can be done on the plate by repeating the entire process of grounding, scribing and etching, or by several other means. I will talk about a few of those processes in future posts.

Some of the time I feel like an Artist,

some of the time I am a Chemist stirring up the corrosive salts,

and at times I am a journeyman printer or a coppersmith.

There's part of my day I spend as a journalist...

But throughout it all,

there is the creation of thoughts on paper for all to see.

Stephen M. Perry

Friday, April 3, 2009

From the Backroads Gallery
Another one of the great places in the Flint Hills, this scene is found east of K-177 and north of the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve in Chase County.


"UPPER FOX CREEK WATERSHED"

An Original Etching

Flanking Highway 177 through Strong Township in Chase County,

The Fox Creek watershed includes private land and

some of the most well-known Flint Hills pasture lands,

Set aside and managed for the future

in the Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve.

Stephen M. Perry

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

Printmaking Process
Scribed Copper Plate Ready for Etching

The plate shown below has been scribed and is ready for the etching process. I have used the tools shown to scratch through the hard ground coating, creating a line drawing in reverse. Not only is the drawing reversed as a negative with the lines showing as lighter copper color on the dark background, but the image is reversed from the actual scene. The plate must be a reverse of the scene so that when the plate is printed and a mirror image of the plate is created, the image will be correct. I have flipped the reference photo in Photoshop in order to use it as a reference for the scribing.



Scribed Plate and Reference Photo



Detail of Scribed Plate


The black and white etching,


as the pen and ink drawing, is a process of reducing an image to its simplest form.


Without the distraction of color interpretation and reaction,


the viewer is able to move straight to the details which define the scene.


Stephen M. Perry



From the Backroads Gallery

This etching was completed late last year. The old wood barn was found southwest of Council Grove in Morris County, Kansas. It seemed sad that the old barn was abandoned and just waiting for the elements to take their toll. Just think of all the years that it was the center of life on the farm.



"OLD WOOD BARN"

An original Etching



Making one more stand against the elements,

The old wood barn,

Once the center of all the sheltering and toil,

Awaits its eventual demise into a pile of yesterday's memories.


Stephen M. Perry