2018 Workshop Catalog ARAC 2018 Workshop Catalogue-112217-FFO_reduced | Page 53

Brad Ewing, Red White Pattern Hiroki Morinoue, Garden Space II (detail) August 27 – 31 September 10 – 21 Screen Printing for Serious Amateurs On & Off the Press: Japanese Brad Ewing woodcut O CONCEPT: Venture into the exciting world of silkscreen in an introductory course that encourages you to explore the many ways to create these special images. Silkscreen printing is a versatile medium that can be used not only in fine art printing, but fashion design, graphic design, installation, painting and more. Students design and create the image of their choice, and we work together to achieve printed results, from single color images to complex multi-color prints using registration techniques. Discover creative ways that this medium can best suit your image making or how you can reinterpret your work through silkscreen printmaking. MEDIA & TECHNIQUES: Students print with water- based inks onto paper or fabric with screens that have been coated in photo-emulsion. We process our handmade films, and print using various editioning experiments and monoprinting techniques. ACTIVITIES: Through demonstrations and studio time, we learn to coat and shoot screens, generate films, separate and sequence colors, mix and apply transparent colors, and printing techniques. During group discussions, we explore several kinds of image production and discuss the value of using manual methods in an age of digital reproduction. FACULTY: Brad Ewing has been a visiting instructor for Pratt Institute’s Printmaking Department for the past ten years. He is also co-director of Planthouse Gallery, founded in 2013. Additionally, he prints and publishes for Grenfell Press and Marginal Editions. Brad received his M.F.A. from the Rhode Island School of Design in 2004. Hiroki Morinoue O CONCEPT: Delve into the fascinating tradition of Mokuhanga (water-based Japanese woodblock printmaking) in which the linear details of the image are created first and color plates are produced later. We focus on Mokuhanga — a handmade, environmentally friendly, do-it-at-home, scalable craft. We also get the opportunity to use the press when printing drypoint plates — an intaglio process where we draw on plexi using a stylus. We find creative ways to merge the two processes and create a complex, multilayered image. Students compose, and then recompose printed images into a narrative format, coming away from the course with a new understanding of this ancient art. MEDIA & TECHNIQUES: Techniques include creating linear detail with drypoint methods, working on a printing press, hand printing color plates in the traditional Mokuhanga style, and adding subtle surface detail and contrast. ACTIVITIES: We engage in daily demonstrations on inking, plate wiping, carving and printing techniques, and we invite one-on-one discussions about image making, personal style and visual vocabulary. FACULTY: Hiroki Morinoue began teaching Mokuhanga at Anderson Ranch over 20 years ago. He has traveled to Japan for an intensive artist-in-residence program sponsored by the Mokuhanga Innovation Laboratory and attended the 2nd International Mokuhanga Conference 2014 and Satellite Program in Tokyo. student feedback from 2017 workshops “During my time at Anderson Ranch, I received professional development skills that transcended beyond what any academic institution could have given me.” www.marginaleditions.com TUITION $985 | TUITION + STUDIO SUPPORT DONATION $1,185 REGISTRATION FEE $45 CODE R1313-18 | | STUDIO FEE $100 ENROLLMENT LIMIT 10 TUITION $1,400 | TUITION + STUDIO SUPPORT DONATION $1,800 REGISTRATION FEE $45 CODE R1514-18 | | STUDIO FEE $175 ENROLLMENT LIMIT 10 printmaking  51