Showing posts with label Photographs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Photographs. Show all posts

Sunday, August 25, 2013

Fleeting moments in the inky darkness

In the night

Dungeness beach as a flickering fairground.....

"Fleeting moments in the inky darkness."

A limited edition of 80 prints - Dimensions 48 X 40 cm (unframed)

*One off size (fits a standard frame size of 52 cm x 42 cm)

'Showbiz in the night' - price: £60

Editioned images are sized to create borders for ease of mounting in a standard frame size. Signed, dated, titled & sent with full provenance & authentication - Edition limited to 80 - *Postage is included in all prices

All images are produced as C-type Digital Photo Prints - Using the very best in photo printing equipment - The Poliettronica Laserlab and printing on archival Fuji professional photo paper.

Monday, April 1, 2013

Impromptu manifestation | Crookid Stiks 'n' $TONES

In the L.A.B. Impromptu manifestation - The 3rd showing space - Paddy Hamilton, Oliver Schofield, Robyn Banning - Photographs | Digital frames 'in movement' + Painterly wooden structures

One painting wall and printing press still operational throughout the duration of the show

"...it's meet the little artist time .." - (!)

*Making clarity details | Minimal signage as we go along..

'Pouncing' about.. On coloured Perspex blocks

To pounce

Pouncing is an art technique used for transferring an image from one surface to another. It is similar to tracing, and is useful for creating copies of a sketch outline to produce finished works. Pouncing has been a common technique for centuries, used to create copies of portraits and other works that would be finished as oil paintings, engravings, and so on. The most common method involves laying semi-transparent paper over the original image, then tracing along the lines of the image by creating pricked marks on the top sheet of paper. This pounced drawing made of pricked holes is laid over a new working surface. A powder such as chalk, graphite or pastel is forced through the holes to leave an outline on the working surface below, thus transferring the image. The powder is applied by being placed into a small bag of thin fabric such as cheesecloth, then dabbed onto the pricked holes of the pounced drawing.

*Source - Trusted Wiki - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pounce_(art)

Below - Studios 1 & 2