DIANA JONES ARTS
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Quick Monoprint Techniques

11/3/2022

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This Ink: schminke college linol, waterbased.

1.   Drawing on paper on ink

Mark two borders on perspex  - one for ink and one outside this for paper.
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Roll out ink on tray  - keep it no larger than width of roller.

Roll ink onto perspex within your border - just going on the tape. 



​Place paper carefully on this, being careful not to press on it. 

Draw with pencil on the paper.







Lift up paper to reveal print of your drawing. It will be in reverse.

Leave to dry then tray adding some colour with watercolour paint, quickly and with a light hand.
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​2. Making marks in ink then printing 

Roll out the ink onto the perspex surface then try different tools to scrap away the ink, making varied marks. 

Carefully place the paper on top and, using your hand to rub down, print this. 

This one has been coloured later with the contrasting yellow.


3.Transfer Technique. 

Roll out ink on the tray.

Roll ink onto paper. 

Place paper on the cartridge paper, ink side down.




Make your marks on top of this. They will transfer to the base paper. 

This is really good for letters and words as they are printed the right way up. 

Paul Klee used this technique. He used oil paint so that he could paint washes of colour on top without effecting the lines. 






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​4. Paint image on surface and print


On your printing surface (perspex), mark out the area you want to print with a masking tape border.

Use the printing ink as paint with a brush and draw straight onto your clean surface. 

Place your paper on top and print, using rubbing carefully with your hand.

Take a second print and see what happens.

You can leave these to dry then add colour on your printed image. 
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Try making another print using more colours. 

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​These are prints made in the same way but using water paint on gelli plates.








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Prep for Lorenco. Myddelton House Gardens, Enfield.

6/3/2022

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Visited Myddelton House Gardens today in preparation for our trip there later in March. 

Designed and planted by the then owner E A Bowles, who became a celebrated botanist, plant collector, gardener and writer. 

I really liked it - lots of variety and odd collections of slightly random architectural features, statues etc. and some quite architectural plants. Not an enormous place so perfect for looking at details - emerging buds on plants that still have seed heads, textures and colours on bark of the 450 year old yew trees, shapes and patterns of succulents and tropical plants in the greenhouses. Lots of bulbs out of course and rhodedenrons on their way. Swathes of daffodils and snowdrops and white fritilleries; masses of hellebores of various subtle hues. There will be plenty more flowers and colour by the end of the month. 

Hoping that some of the group will draw some of the shapes, colours and textures, as well as photographing details. Encourage them to look at patterns on leaves, rhythms of plants...

quite a lot of fruit trees trained on south facing walls which could be our inspiration for the tree in the corridor - as if it is trained on the walls there.

The  'Bowles Museum'  - small room, time line with images going all round, not currently any original Bowles illustrations. Maybe they are all in RHS collections. some images from the internet of crocus studies. He was particularly interested in them and cultivated many new varieties.






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Developing project. Lorenco House.

3/3/2022

 

Planning so far:
Exploring drawing and printing techniques around a tree theme. 
Looking at the work of Paul Klee both in terms of technique and imagery. 
Need to make it accessible and inspiring for all including those who are visually impaired. So use of tactile materials and drawing techniques.

Aim of project:
Foster confidence
New skills
Social
Play

Outcomes:
Tree artworks to go in corridor by lounge, with tree elements (leaves, seeds, flowers) and creatures (especially birds) as basis for artwork which explores deeper themes and interests of the resident participants, such as food, special trees they like/remember from their diverse backgrounds.

Individual artwork within a collaborative work. 




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Initially searched Klee tree and leaves.
​Love the variety of images. I don't remember seeing single leaf images before which are strong in their simplicity, joyful. 

Wondering whether to use the red tree house image as a timeslip in the first session. It's called The Tree of Houses. 

Thinking about how these will inspire drawing. I like that  Trees and leaves can become quite abstract quite quickly. Excellent start for patterns. 








Birds.
Characters. Animated. Communing with each other.

Also wondering about using one of these as Timeslip. 

I like the idea of using a Klee image as the timeslip. so we are really looking at an artwork.  


Thinking more about suitable image to inspire Time slip. Really like the red house of trees but it is maybe too small and textured, plus no characters in it - just the not very clear dive bombing bird on the top left. 

So have been trying to find a good treehouse photo with people in it, which has proved quite hard. eventually found better images by googling 'vintage photo of people with tree house. Much better. the first two are of a the treehouse at the Kit Kat club in the twenties. But I think I will use the last, titled 'A treehouse for grownups' and dated 1961. 

Lots to inspire some  stories there. 




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