Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Sketch-book Page, 29th August 2012

Sketch-book Page, 29th August 2012



Having barely slept a wink last night I didn't feel fit enough mentally for any sort of 'proper' work. So to-day I have spent the day rather mindlessly washing clothes, blogging, eating ginger cake and sketching.

To-day I am mostly pre-occupied by the patterns in things and in Nature, it seems. Wondrous Mother Nature!! When we move to the coast next month I plan to spend long days studying the geometry and form of plants and wildlife...

Odd to say but to-day I feel I have become better at drawing. Perhaps that's what kept me awoke last night - creative growing pains?

Museum Journal - Part 26 (Alt)

Museum Journal - Part 26 (Alt)


Part 26 of the Director of the National Museum of Britsh History's Diary, for regular client Museum Journal (MJ), August 2012 issue. The Editor wanted an alternative story to the one I'd been given previously.

This month our man meets a colleague at the Olympics Opening Ceremony VIP Party who'd had to undergo an initiation ritual with education minister Michael Gove, which included dressing in school uniform and saying his prayers beside his bed...

As always with MJ the final print size is minute (3 or 4 cm across tops) so its crucial to keep the design very simple and the detail to a minimum.

Transfer Trials: Digital Ceramic

Transfer Trials: Digital Ceramic

After umpteen experiments into producing Delft tiles I have, for now, decided that the most genuine and charming technique is to paint directly onto tiles using cobalt on-glaze and firing them. It has some issues I need to iron out if I can. But for Delftware, transfer decals just don't seem right somehow. That said, transfers continue to wield quite an appeal for me (just not for Delft).

Previous experiments with decals seemed to indicate that a lot depended upon the chemistry, the reaction of firing the transfers onto particular glazed tile surfaces.

So I gathered together 6 different types of tile, sent them to transfer decal manufacturers Digital Ceramic in Stoke-on-Trent and asked them to fire the one particular design onto them to conpare how they each behaved. Here are the results...

All the tiles together; quite a mixed bag!

All together

Delft tile, Authentic (below). The tile I use for painting Delft. But here the transfer has come out quite dark and dull. UNSURE/ REJECTED!

AUTHENTIC

Delft tile, Antique (below). Quite a nice tile this, and a good vibrant colour. Bizarrely, firing the decal has melted the tile surface's crackles away. ACCEPTABLE!

ANTIQUE

Delft tile, Ivory (below). Also quite a successful result. Transfer a little dull but not much, and the tile's crazed surface remains. ACCEPTABLE!

IVORY

Fired Earth, Architecture (below). A larger tile I was considering using for a project I am involved in with Tinsmiths gallery in Ledbury (more of that later).  A good bright colour, a good clear surface. ACCEPTABLE!

ARCHITECTURE


Fired Earth, English Delft (below). A rustic and chunky tile, quite thick and irregular. This has fired very well. One of the two or three tiles I am considering using for a tile suite I will create for the Artists of Spitalfields Life exhibition at Ben Pentreath's in November. One of my favourites. ACCEPTABLE!

ENGLISH DELFT


Fired Earth, Soho Garden (below). A lovely solid crackled tile, one I'd pinned a lot of hopes on. But the decal firing was, as you can see, an unmitigated disaster - blurred, dull and uneven. Very firmly REJECTED (alas, alack)!

SOHO GARDEN

Which do you prefer?



Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Nailed it (well almost)!

Nailed it (well almost)!

Dog & Bone (Spider's head corners)

 Here's the results of my most recent tile trials. And I think I've pretty much nailed it!

Drawn with blue cobalt oxide on-glaze paste, mixed with a gum arabic/ water solution, using a dip pen (after I'd abandoned using a fine brush - too unwieldy). The thinking behind this was to create a better flow and also a little adhesion to the glazed tile surface.

Fired for me, very generously, by the wonderful Rob Ryan and his team.

There has been a little bubbling of the marks in places, seemingly where I'd over-worked the washes that I applied (a day) after the outlines. But I don't think it detracts from the overall look at all (if anything it has a certain charm). Lighter, more deftly applied washes should avoid that occurring so much in future...

All said, I'm pretty chuffed. Feel that I'm now in a position to proceed with securing a few hearth-back commissions. The Bommer Delft tile workshop is now (nearly) open for business!

Here they are before firing...

Unfired  
 and after a night in the kiln at around 800º C...

Fired
I've nibbed the edges a little in places and rubbed ashes into the surface crackled to further antique them.

Amor Vincit Omnia (Love Conquers All) with fleur-de-lys corners

Sanglier, with stylised fleur-de-lys corners

Elephant (Martin Lane), stylised fleur-de-lys corners

Fruit Bowl, with fleur-de-lys corners

Magpie (One for Sorrow), spider's head corners

Fluvius Tamesis, ox-head corners

Triton or merman, ox-head corners

Vase of Flowers, spider's head corners

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Porca Miseria!

Porca Miseria!



I really need to get off my arse and lose some weight - all this comfort eating is making me, well, uncomfortable...

Self-portrait as a Roast Suckling Pig.

Death & Cabbages (screenprint)

Death & Cabbages (screenprint)

 Recently-created screen print, three colours, 29.7 cm by 42 cm (A3), a small Limited Edition of 30, signed and numbered by the Artist.

Inspired by a quote from the 16th Century french philosopher Michel de Montaigne 'Je veux que la mort me trouve plantant mes choux' - I hope that Death finds me planting my cabbages!

Montaigne also famously once questioned whether he was playing with his cat, or whether his cat was playing with him. So I have included Montaigne's moggy at Death's feet. 

Available to buy from my Etsy shop, a steal at £55

https://www.etsy.com/listing/101420378/death-cabbages-screenprint?ref=v1_other_2



The Seventh Seal (screen print)

The Seventh Seal (screen print)



Recently-created screen print, black and white, 29.7 cm by 42 cm (A3), Limited Edition of 45, signed and numbered by the Artist.

Inspired by Ingmar Bergman's 1957 classic film, The Seventh Seal (Det Sjunde Inseglet, in Swedish), where Death (Bengt Ekerot) and a weary knight, Antonius Block (Max Von Sydow), play a fatal game of chess...

Block asks 'You play chess, do you not?'. The Grim Reaper responds 'You have heard that?'

Available to buy from my Etsy shop at the criminally low price of £55.
https://www.etsy.com/listing/101420641/the-seventh-seal-screenprint?ref=v1_other_1