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Intaglio printmaker
Intaglio printmaker




intaglio printmaker
  1. #Intaglio printmaker archive
  2. #Intaglio printmaker full

It encouraged her to try new mediums, including the use of photopolymer plates, and gain perspective from the experts she worked alongside.

intaglio printmaker

The week’s focus on making individual prints rather than editions was a slight departure from Swenson’s normal practice. Rochester-based artist Heather Swenson made a pair of two-print sets incorporating watercolor, silkscreen and collage that were selected for the exhibition/auction and Cary Collection. The workshop is planned to run again in 2024. The whole group was able to produce some really interesting, innovative work.” “Now with Eileen (Feeney Bushnell) and the faculty and the grad students helping out, it’s just so much fun. “Keith used to be at the nucleus of pulling together a lot of people,” Kiekeben said.

intaglio printmaker

Kiekeben, who wrote the foreword to Howard’s book, The Contemporary Printmaker: Intaglio-Type & Acrylic Resist Etching, couldn’t help but think of his old friend while working, once again, in the setting of his breakthrough artistic discovery. Instead of etching on metal, Howard’s new form of intaglio printmaking allowed mediums like drawings, paintings, photography and digital vector images to be translated into etchings.

intaglio printmaker

Howard, who died in 2015, is credited with modernizing intaglio printmaking, a classic technique where an image is incised into a printing plate that holds ink for transfer onto paper. Kiekeben spent part of his RIT residency continuing his work with the non-toxic intaglio type printmaking process pioneered and perfected by Howard, who previously led RIT’s printmaking program. Access to RIT’s Fab Lab - where artists used technology like a laser cutter to make plates - and tours of the Cary Collection and Vignelli Center for Design Studies also informed the artists’ work. The event served as a creative arena for artists to tinker with trusted, time-tested processes as well as contemporary approaches. The BFA and MFA students, alumni and faculty who assisted the artists in the studio were: Denise Anderson, Nava Barenji, Ying Chen, Gretchen Ettlie, Kerina Mangiaracina, Lauren Mullen, Marija Ratkeviciute, Yushan Socola, Morgan Sychtysz, Hannah Wagner, Kirk Wu and Yaoqin Xiao. In addition to Erickson, Kiekeben and Vera, the visiting artists were Marnix Everaert, Erin Holscher Almazan, Richard Kegler, Daniela Marx, Jim Morris, Andy Rubin, Vida Sacic, Grace Sippy and Heather Swenson. It’s part of the experience to engage with people who are coming in and talk with the other artists.”īob Erickson shows off his work during open studio hours. “I didn’t want to come here and only print. “I think that’s important, that dialogue that’s happening between students and the artists,” said Marchelo Vera ’06 ( graphic design), ’12 MFA ( fine arts studio), one of the visiting artists who is an assistant professor of printmaking at The College of New Jersey.

#Intaglio printmaker full

Just a lot of fun and camaraderie, all within this framework of feeling welcomed by the people who work at RIT.”īetween 12 visiting artists and as many student, alumni and faculty volunteers, RIT's printmaking studio was an energetic environment full of collaboration and innovation for the Artists Print! event.īushnell was the lead organizer of Artists Print!, sponsored by RIT printmaking in collaboration with RIT’s Cary Graphic Arts Collection and the Print Club of Rochester.Ī host of RIT College of Art and Design faculty, students and alumni assisted the artists throughout the week, and open studio hours welcomed the public to witness the energetic and collaborative environment. We also exchanged new ideas - conceptual, new approaches, new materials, things you can do in the future. This event works on so many levels because we all became friends. “Every time I’ve had an incredible time at RIT,” Kiekeben said. Monoprinting is an artform where the produced image can only be made once, resulting in a unique, one-of-one piece.Ī monoprint from each artist was showcased and auctioned off at RIT City Art Space while another was selected for inclusion in the Cary Graphic Arts Collection.

#Intaglio printmaker archive

They explored familiar and new printmaking processes to produce monoprints that were exhibited and added to RIT’s vast archive collections. The residency program invited the artists to campus for a lively week of creating and experimenting. Kiekeben returned to his alternate home as one of 12 accomplished printmakers participating in RIT’s Artists Print! event May 15-21. The German-born artist has been a frequent flier in RIT’s printmaking studios - as a guest speaker and for research collaborations with Professor Eileen Feeney Bushnell and before her, former faculty Keith Howard. Friedhard Kiekeben jokes that he has lived in Rochester for eight months of his life.






Intaglio printmaker