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SGC INTERNATIONAL • Printmaking ConferenceSGC INTERNATIONAL • Printmaking Conference
CONTENTS
WELCOME
QUICK SCHEDULE
DAILY AGENDA
AWARDS & SPEAKERS
PAPERS & PANELS
PROJECTS
DEMONSTRATIONS
EVENTS
THEMED PORTFOLIOS
CAMPUS EXHIBITIONS
OFF-CAMPUS EXHIBITIONS
PRODUCT / PUBLISHER FAIR
SPONSORS
RESOURCES
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
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AR
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ART + technology
Friday, March 22
11 am – 4 pm
MIAD, 2nd Floor
Stop by and discover a new, engaging way for audiences
to experience your work. You’ll learn the basics behind
interactive print, and actually create your own augmented
reality experience!
Follow the instructions to download the Actable® interactive print app from Quad/Graphics. Then look for opportunities to launch cool Actable®-enabled experiences at PrintMKE!
Experience the Quad/Graphics
Augmented Reality Workshop
© 2013 Quad/Graphics, Inc. All rights reserved. | 03.13 | 13-1179
FOLLOW QUAD/GRAPHICS ON
www.QG.com/IPS866-824-2869
ips@qg.com
13-1179 PrintMKE_3.indd 1 3/4/13 3:52 PM
WELCOME
AG
EN
DA
2 | 3
WELCOME
Welcome from Conference Chairs: Jessica Meuninck-Ganger and Rina YoonWelcome to Print:MKE! As your conference organizers, we’ve been planning and working together to make this year’s conference the best experience in SGCI history! We hope you take the time to attend the many lectures and presentations, participate in the demos, browse the publishers and product fair, explore the city’s galleries, share your portfolio, make new friends, catch up with your colleagues, and, of course, spend some time enjoying Milwaukee’s fabulous food and spirits. Be sure to take advantage of our free shuttle and travel to both host campuses. The prints you’ll find on exhibition here are lush, gorgeous and engaging. The dialogue you’ll find here is varied and deep. Print:MKE 2013 is a moment of collaboration and gathering, a time and place for sharing ideas and diving deeper into the need to create and communicate. We are, together, a community of makers. We hope that your time in Milwaukee is thoughtful and fun!
Jessica Meuninck-GangerArea Head, Print and Narrative Forms, Assistant ProfessorUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, Peck School of the Arts
Rina YoonAssociate Professor, PrintmakingMilwaukee Institute of Art & Design
Jessica Meuninck-Ganger
Rina Yoon
A hundred thousand welcomes: I could weep, And I could laugh; I am light, and heavy: Welcome.
—William Shakespeare
Make Way! Welcome to Milwaukee! Makes sense. It is only fitting that this year’s conference has the theme of “make” at its heart. Print:MKE celebrates the maker, affirming the value of the object, the authority of artworks afforded by skillful craft and especially that part of the creative process that embraces and values haptic knowledge—discovery through the hands—and the understanding that comes only through the act of making.
Make no mistake; the wonderful conference you are taking part in was made possible by the extraordinary labors of the Milwaukee planning committee. I want to especially thank Rina Yoon and Jessica Meuninck-Ganger, planning committee co-chairs for this 2013 conference. In the works for almost three years, this gathering certainly did not materialize out of thin air. Its success is directly linked to their vision, hard work and, at times, their capacity to make virtue out of necessity. I am sure this conference has made honest women of them both.
Make out like a bandit. Woo hoo! Take a quick look at the conference schedule, and you can see that it is packed with events of all sorts: exciting lectures, thought-provoking panels, virtuoso demos, gold-star exhibitions and a merrymaking social calendar. I would like to thank all of our speakers, panelists, exhibitors, vendors and publishers. Your expertise and talents are truly what make this rich selection of activities possible.
Made of gold. I would also like to acknowledge all of our esteemed guest artists, speakers and award winners: Alison Saar, Lesley Dill, Judith Solodkin, Margo Humphrey, Frances Myers, John Risseeuw, La Ceiba Gráfica, Lori Bauman and Steve Vande Zande of Redline Milwaukee, David Jones, Russell Jankowski and Cissie Peltz. I hope you will all make plans to join me in remembering Roger Steele, one of the founders of SGCI, who passed away last summer. We’ll be sharing some remembrances during our Saturday banquet and, fittingly, The Fine Arts Gallery is generously hosting an exhibition of some of Roger’s valentine prints. We love ya, Roger.
Make my day. It really is all about you, my fellow SGCI members. Whether you are a lifer or a first-time attendee, I am sure you will find that this conference is ultimately about the camaraderie and rich exchange of print awesomeness that comes from our three days together. Thank you for being a part of the ongoing tradition of sharing that makes this organization so exceptional.
Print:MKE! A conference made to order. Here’s to your pleasure as you make the rounds.
Beth GrabowskiPresident, SGC International 2012–2014
A Hundred Thousand Welcomes
Beth Grabowski
WELCOME
4 | 5
WELCOME
WELCOME
Greetings and welcome to Milwaukee and the 2013 SGCI Conference. We’re glad you’re here. This year’s conference, Print:MKE, is the result of a collaboration between two of this city’s premier learning institutions: the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design and The University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
MIAD educates its 700 students for well-rounded lives driven by a passion to inspire, problem solve and innovate for our economy and society.
A hotbed of novel thinkers since 1974, the college has formed an unmatched intimate learning community in which students develop their visual voice while learning the technical skills, conceptual awareness and professional contexts necessary to fully realize their creativity. Renowned faculty comes together with staff, trustees and hundreds of communal and business partners to elevate and support students’ knowledge and skills while engaging them in shaping the environment in which they learn.
In addition to their deep ties to the professional community, students take 1/3 of their credits in Liberal Studies, and forge lasting connections to the general community through the college’s award-winning Service Learning Program.
We hope you’ll join us on Friday and Saturday to explore the college – the state’s only independent, four-year college of art and design – view the prints in our galleries and participate in our demonstrations and workshops. You’ll see that our walls are pulsing with art and design works by MIAD students from around country.
We also know you’ll enjoy Milwaukee’s Historic Third Ward, where MIAD is located. With its numerous design firms and galleries, many with ties to MIAD alumni, the Historic Third Ward was recently named one of America’s Top Twelve ArtPlaces for 2013.
Have a terrific conference!
Neil HoffmanPresident, MIAD
On behalf of the nearly 2,000 students and more than 250 faculty and staff of the UWM Peck School of the Arts, it is my pleasure to welcome you to Milwaukee for the 2013 SGC International Conference. Especially since this is the Year of the Arts at UWM, celebrating the 50th anniversary of the Peck School, we are delighted to be a partner with your prestigious organization and are confident that you will be impressed with Milwaukee’s cultural richness.
The Peck School of the Arts is the most prolific arts provider in Wisconsin, offering more than 350 art exhibitions; dance, music and theatre performances; and film screenings each year. Our faculty and students benefit from UWM’s urban setting, which provides comprehensive opportunities to learn outside the classroom through the school’s extensive partnerships with professional arts organizations and businesses, ranging from the Milwaukee Repertory Theater, the Milwaukee Art Museum, Danceworks, the Milwaukee Film Festival and the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra to countless local graphic design and marketing firms. I hope you will take the opportunity to visit the wide array of events and exhibits scheduled at the UWM Peck School of the Arts, Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design, the Milwaukee Art Museum and the eclectic mix of galleries and venues throughout the Milwaukee metropolitan area.
We look forward to the many artistic, academic and intellectual offerings the SGCI Conference brings to our community and hope to keep the dialogue you bring to us going well into the future. I am confident that your collective research and presentations will be an inspiration for us all!
Scott Emmons Interim Dean, Peck School of the ArtsUniversity of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
WELCOME
Neil Hoffman Scott Emmons
David Martin
David Martin Vice President of Academic Affairs, MIAD
WELCOME
SCHEDULE
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AGENDA
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DAILY AGENDA
8 | 9
AGENDA
2:00–6:00 p.m. SGCI Board Meeting | MIAD Board Room
2:00–7:00 p.m.Check-in | UWM PSOA Zelazo 200A Lobby Registration | Zelazo 144 Box Office Members Portfolio Exchange | dropoff Zelazo 177
5:00–8:00 p.m.Exhibition Opening Receptions | MIAD + Inova
8:00–10:30 p.m.Kick Off Party at Alterra on Prospect Avenue
8:30 a.m.–4:30 p.m.Check-in UWM | Zelazo 200A LobbyRegistration | Zelazo 144 Box OfficeMembers Portfolio Exchange | Dropoff Zelazo 177
9:00–10:30 a.m. Welcome and Keynote Presentation Alison SaarUWM PSOA, Zelazo 220 (Concert Hall)
10:45–11:45 a.m. | Papers and Panels
“I Had a Blueprint of History”: A Case Study in Livere D’Artiste CollaborationUWM PSOA, Zelazo 220
Is It Something in the Water? The Remarkable Proliferation of Wisconsin PrintmakersUWM Golda Meir Library, Room 490
11:30 a.m.–12:45 p.m. Box Lunches | UWM PSOA Zelazo 200A
11:45–1:00 p.m.Membership Meeting | UWM PSOA Zelazo 171
1:00–2:25 p.m. | Projects and Demonstrations
Kruty Letterpress DemoUWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 336
David Krut Print Workshop (DKW), JohannesburgUWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 302
Moku Hanga: Japanese Wood Block PrintingUWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 179
Pastemaking for Printmakers: Silkscreen Printing UWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 390
A Homemade Printmaker UWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 403
The Nitty Gritty of Carborundum Intaglio UWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 345
2:35–4:00 p.m. | Projects and Demonstrations
Kruty Letterpress DemoUWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 336
David Krut Print Workshop (DKW), JohannesburgUWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 302
Moku Hanga: Japanese Wood Block PrintingUWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 179
Pastemaking for Printmakers: Silkscreen PrintingUWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 390
A Homemade Printmaker UWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 403
A Painterly Approach to Intaglio UWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 345
Bike PRINT:MKE: Cycling, Printmaking, CommunityUWM Spaights Plaza, near the Studio Arts and Craft Center, UWM Union *MKE ride to follow from 4:00-5:00 p.m.
1:00–2:25 p.m. | Papers and Panels
STUDENT PANEL | Reinventing the Visual Language of PrintmakingUWM Golda Meir Library, Room 490
Community Support: A Roundtable Discussion UWM PSOA, Zelazo 220 (Concert Hall)
Chasing Dreams: Printing Teaching and Collaboration in Havana and HanoiUWM PSOA, Arts Center Lecture Hall
From Pop-Up to PermanentUWM PSOA, Arts Center Lecture Hall
Wednesday, March 20
Shuttle from hotel block to UWM PSOA Zelazo Center and to MIAD and Kenilworth Square East for exhibitions
Thursday, March 21
Shuttle from hotel block to UWM PSOA Zelazo Center and Kenilworth Square East (one looping to MIAD and Milwaukee Art Museum for exhibitions)
ONGOING EVENTS
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Product FairUWM Zelazo 250 + 280 (Thu, Fri, Sat)
10:45 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Justseeds Uprisings: Images of LaborUWM Union Gallery + Art Studio and Craft Center
1:00–2:25 p.m.Krut Workshop (ART 302) 2:35–4:00 p.m.Krut Workshop (ART 302)
Thursday, March 21 continued
Shuttle from hotel block to UWM PSOA Zelazo Center and Kenilworth Square East (one looping to MIAD and Milwaukee Art Museum for exhibitions)
ONGOING EVENTS
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Product FairUWM Zelazo 250 + 280 (Thu, Fri, Sat)
10:45 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Justseeds Uprisings: Images of LaborUWM Union Gallery + Art Studio and Craft Center
1:00–2:25 p.m.Krut Workshop (ART 302) 2:35–4:00 p.m.Krut Workshop (ART 302)
WELCOME
WELCOME
AGENDA
AGENDA
10 | 11
2:35–4:00 p.m. | Papers and Panels
Viral Vectors: Prints, Resistance, ActivismUWM Golda Meir Library, Room 490
International Panel | Makers in PrintUWM PSOA, Arts Center Lecture Hall
4:15–5:30 p.m.Keynote Presentation | La Cieba GraficaUWM PSOA Zelazo 220 (Concert Hall)
6:00–10:00 p.m.Open PortfolioUWM PSOA, Kenilworth Square East
7:00–9:00 p.m. UWM Digital Craft Research Lab | Jay Fox and Frankie FloodUWM PSOA, Kenilworth Square East, Room 368 CNC Rapid Prototyping and Laser Cutting
7:00–9:00 p.m. Quiet Revolution Milwaukee UWM PSOA, Kenilworth Square East, Room 375
7:00–9:00 p.m. Graduate and Faculty Studio Open HouseUWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
5:00–8:00 p.m.Justseeds Uprisings ReceptionUWM Union Gallery
7:30–10:00 p.m. | Riverwest Gallery Hop
Imagination Giants 901 East Wright Street, Milwaukee
Jazz Gallery Center for the Arts 926 East Center Street, Milwaukee
Woodland Pattern Book Center 720 East Locust Street, Milwaukee
8:00–11:30 p.m. Rock the Block EventFalcon Bowl (Polish Falcon), 801 E. Clarke St., Milwaukee
8:30 a.m.–12:30 p.m.Check-in UWM | Zelazo 200A LobbyRegistration | Zelazo 144 Box OfficeMembers Portfolio Exchange | Dropoff Zelazo 177
9:00–10:30 a.m.Lesley Dill, SGCI Lifetime Achievement in Printmaking Award PresentationMIAD, Room 320
10:45–11:45 a.m. | Papers and Panels
Voices of SilenceMIAD, RL80
Occupy ArtMIAD, Room 320
Collaborative Thinking and Making in the ”Post Racial” Digital AtelierMIAD, Room 465E
11:30–12:45 p.m. Box Lunches | MIAD, 2nd Floor
1:00–2:25 p.m. | Demonstrations
The Unique Print: Monotyping Wisconsin-Style Fresh Hot Press MIAD, Room 345
Century Plate LithographyMIAD, Room 360
Multiple-Plate Printing for Intaglio | Crown Point Press MIAD, Room 335, Intaglio Studio
Make/Do: Building Your Own Low-Cost Printing Press with Easily Accessible Materials MIAD, Room 325
Three BridgesMIAD River Level, East Gallery
Layer Upon Layer Upon Layer: Cool Paper, Hot Glass and Other StuffMIAD, Room 230
Picnic Table PrintmakingMIAD, Room 315
1:00–5:00 p.m. Film Screening | Midwest MatrixMIAD, Room 270
Friday, March 22
Shuttle from hotel block to MIAD, one looping to UWM PSOA Zelazo for Product Fair and KSE for exhibitions
ONGOING EVENTS
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Publisher FairMIAD, Rooms 355, 365, 375, 385
11:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.Quad Graphics Augmented Reality ProjectMIAD, Room 250A/B/C and 245
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Product FairUWM Zelazo Ballroom
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Justseeds Uprisings: Images of LaborUWM Union Gallery
Thursday, March 21 continued
Shuttle from hotel block to UWM PSOA Zelazo Center and Kenilworth Square East (one looping to MIAD for exhibitions)
ONGOING EVENTS
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Product FairUWM Zelazo 250 + 280 (Thu, Fri, Sat)
10:45 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Justseeds Uprisings: Images of LaborUWM Union Gallery + Art Studio and Craft Center
1:00–2:25 p.m.Krut Workshop (ART 302) 2:35–4:00 p.m.Krut Workshop (ART 302)
DAILY AGENDA
WELCOME
WELCOME
AGENDA
AGENDA
12 | 13
2:35–4:00 p.m. | Demonstrations
Multiple-Plate Printing for Intaglio Crown Point Press MIAD, Room 335, Intaglio Studio
Mokulito | MIAD, Room 345
Make/Do: Building Your Own Low-Cost Printing Press with Easily Accessible Materials MIAD, Room 325
Velvetint on Copper and Zinc | MIAD, Room 360
Three Bridges | MIAD, River Level, East Gallery
Layer Upon Layer Upon Layer: Cool Paper, Hot Glass and Other StuffMIAD, Room 230
Picnic Table Printmaking | MIAD, Room 315
1:00–2:25 p.m. | Papers and Panels
International Exchanges at Artists Proof StudioMIAD, Room 320
Theories of MakingMIAD, Room 465E
Paper PresentationMIAD, RL80, Todd Wehr AuditoriumNancy Spero, Anti-PainterAutomated Drawing: Blurring the Line between Print and DrawingPrintmaking in a “Post Racial” Condition
2:45–4:00 p.m. | Papers and Panels
Printmaking in Today’s ChinaMIAD, Room 320
2:30–3:30 p.m.Judith Solodkin of SOLO Impression, SGCI Printmaker Emeritus Award Recipient Gallery TalkMIAD, Frederick Layton Gallery
4:15–5:30 p.m.Margo Humphrey, SGCI Printmaker Emeritus Award Recipient PresentationMIAD, Room 320
5:00–8:00 p.m. Print Crawl
7:00–11:00 p.m.MAM After Dark EventMilwaukee Art Museum | 700 N. Art Museum Drive, Milwaukee
10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m. | Tours
Lynden Sculpture Garden10:00 a.m. departs from UWM2:30 p.m. returns to UWM
Haggerty Museum of Art � RedLine Milwaukee � Milwaukee County Historical Society10:15 a.m. departs from UWM2:30 p.m. returns to UWM
Walkers Point Arts District (WPCA & UCC)10:15 a.m. departs from MIAD2:30 p.m. returns to MIAD
Bayview Arts District: Sweet Water Organics � Sky High Gallery � Jenie Gao Studio and Gallery10:45 a.m. departs from MIAD3:00 p.m. returns to MIAD
10:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m.Film Screening | Midwest MatrixMIAD, Room 270
10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.Death Metal Press!MIAD, Room 199
6:00 p.m.–11:00 p.m.Discovery WorldAward Ceremony at 6:00 p.m.Closing Party at 7:00 p.m., Tickets $30
Saturday, March 23
Shuttle from hotel block to MIAD, one looping to UWM PSOA Zelazo for Product Fair and KSE for exhibitions
ONGOING EVENTS
9:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.Publisher FairMIAD, Rooms 365, 375, 385
10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.Quad Graphics Augmented Reality ProjectMIAD, Room 250A/B/C and 245
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Product FairUWM PSOA Zelazo Center, Rooms 250, 280
9:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.Membership Portfolio ExhibitionUWM PSOA Zelazo Center, Room 177
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Justseeds Uprisings: Images of LaborUWM Union Gallery
Friday, March 22 continued
Shuttle from hotel block to MIAD, one looping to UWM PSOA Zelazo for Product Fair and KSE for exhibitions
ONGOING EVENTS
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Publisher FairMIAD, Rooms 355, 365, 375, 385
11:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.Quad Graphics Augmented Reality ProjectMIAD, Room 250A/B/C and 245
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Product FairUWM Zelazo Ballroom
9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Justseeds Uprisings: Images of LaborUWM Union Gallery
DAILY AGENDA
AWARDS
+
SPEAKERS
AWARDS
+
SPEAKERS
AWARDS + SPEAKERS
14 | 15
Alison SaarKEYNOTE SPEAKER
Thursday, March 21, 9:00–10:30 a.m. UWM PSOA, Zelazo 220 (Concert Hall)
Los Angeles-based Alison Saar has exhibited in many galleries and museums nationally and internationally, including the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden and the Whitney Museum of American Art. She has been awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship and two National Endowment Fellowships. Her art is represented in the collections of the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Metropolitan Museum of Art and the Whitney Museum of American Art. She studied art and art history at Scripps College and received an MFA from the Otis Art Institute.
La Ceiba GráficaKEYNOTE SPEAKER
Thursday, March 21, 4:15–5:30 p.m.UWM PSOA, Zelazo 220 (Concert Hall)
La Ceiba Gráfica is a nonprofit studio and residency program founded by the association Artistas Veracruzanos Bajo La Ceiba, headed by Per Anderson and Martin Vinaver. It’s located in a small town in the state of Veracruz called Coatepec, located four hours east of Mexico City and two hours from Veracruz City. This residency and print studio is housed in the old Hacienda of La Orduña. Dating back as early as the 16th century, it once existed as a headquarters to the processing of sugarcane and coffee. After many years of being abandoned, a proposal to the government led to the granting of the hacienda to a project of creating an art center whose focus was primarily on graphic arts including lithography, intaglio, Moku Hanga Japanese woodcut, and papermaking.
Lesley Dill Photography by Ed Robbins.
Courtesy of the Artist and George Adams Gallery, New York.
Lesley DillSGCI LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT IN PRINTMAKING AWARD
Friday, March 22, 9:00–10:30 a.m. MIAD, Room 320
New York-based Lesley Dill is an artist, printmaker and sculptor who exhibits nationally and internationally. She has received awards including an Anonymous Was a Woman Award, a Rockefeller Foundation Multi-Artist Production Award, a Joan Mitchell Foundation Grant, a Drawing Award in the Printmaking category from the New York Foundation for the Arts, and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship. Her work is in collections around the country including the Art Institute of Chicago, Kemper Museum of Contemporary Art, Metropolitan Museum of Art, Museum of Modern Art and Whitney Museum. Dill graduated from Trinity College and received an MA from Smith College and an MFA from the Maryland Institute College of Art.
Judith Solodkin, Solo Impression Inc.Bronx, New York
SGCI PRINTMAKER EMERITUS AWARD
Friday March 22, 2:30–3:30 p.m. MIAD, River Level, Frederick Layton Gallery
Judith Solodkin is an artist, a printmaker, a teacher, a publisher and the founder of Solo Impression Inc., a fine arts print studio located in Riverdale (Bronx), New York. Through Solo Impression, she and now master printer Rodney Doyle have collaborated with and published work for artists such as Louise Bourgeois, Christian Marclay, Whitfield Lovell, Nancy Spero, Andrea Zittel and many others, with printed works represented in major museum collections internationally. Solodkin was the first woman to graduate from Tamarind Institute as a Master Lithographer. In addition to mentoring interns through Solo Impressions, she currently teaches at the School of the Visual Arts and Pratt Institute.
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Margo HumphreyHyattsville, Maryland
SGCI PRINTMAKER EMERITUS AWARD
Friday March 22, 4:15–5:30 p.m. MIAD, Room 320
Margo Humphrey is an award-winning artist, printmaker and author whose work has been exhibited internationally and is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, the MacArthur Foundation, the Smithsonian and the National Gallery of Art in Lagos Nigeria, among others. She received her MFA in Printmaking from Stanford University and her BFA from CCAC in painting and printmaking. She has taught at numerous outstanding institutions and currently serves as Head of Printmaking at the University of Maryland at College Park.
Frances MyersUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison, Department of Art
SGCI EXCELLENCE IN TEACHING PRINTMAKING AWARD
Exhibition Reception: Wednesday, March 20, 5:00–8:00 p.m. Inova, KSE, UWM
Frances Myers is a print and multimedia artist who exhibits internationally and teaches at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. She is the recipient of two National Endowment for the Arts Fellowships and H.I. Romnes and Kellett Mid-Career Awards from UW. Her work is in collections at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; the National Museum of American Art; the Chicago Art Institute; the Milwaukee Art Museum; the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston; the Victoria & Albert Museum, London; and Musée des Arts Décoratifs, Paris. Throughout her prolific career, she has continually reinvigorated her studio research and her teaching through experimentation with unusual materials and new technologies—digital prints, installation and video.
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John Risseeuw
HONORARY MEMBER OF THE COUNCIL AWARD
John Risseeuw is professor of art at Arizona State University, where he has taught papermaking, book arts and printmaking since 1980. He directs the Pyracantha Press, founded in 1982 as the book arts imprint of ASU; his own Cabbagehead Press was founded in 1972. His prints, books and collaborative works, many on handmade paper, have been exhibited and collected widely. The Library of Congress has purchased an archive of all of his works on paper and books.
Publications referencing his work include Elspeth Lamb’s Papermaking for Printmakers; Sarah Bodman’s Creating Artist’s Books and A Manifesto for the Book; Betty Bright’s No Longer Innocent; The Complete Printmaker, by Ross, Romano and Ross; and Thelma Newman’s Innovative Printmaking. He was founding president of the College Book Art Association and has served on the board of directors of Hand Papermaking magazine. For over four decades, his art has touched on political and social themes, including corruption, equal rights, environmental abuse, fascism, illegal wars, arms proliferation and sheer idiocy. Some works are prompted by more current fears, observations and anger, but all are executed in a journalistic sense: the artist as witness. Recent prints and a limited-edition book about landmines, victims and detritus of war were executed on paper made from the clothing of victims, plant fibers from the minefields and the shredded currency of nations that make the landmines. That project has generated more than $20,000 in fundraising for agencies that assist mine victims and work for mine clearance.
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Host Defined Awards
Gallery Owner/Director Cissie PeltzSUPPORTERS IN PRINT: ART DEALER
Cissie Peltz, a nationally known cartoonist, opened Peltz Gallery on Milwaukee’s East Side in July 1989. Since then she has been committed to representing artists working in print and has enjoyed a long relationship with several fine art presses including Anchor Graphics, Landfall Press, Paulson Bott, Pace Prints, Tandem Press, Tamarind Institute, Sharks Ink, Edition Schellmann, John Szoke Editions and more. The gallery maintains a large inventory of museum-quality original lithographs, etchings, relief, and photo process prints, including the diverse works of Bosman, Caporael, Carnwath, Warrington Colescott, Cottingham, Christo, Dill, Dine, Fitzpatrick, Gilliam, Haas, Himmelfarb, Katz, Pasckhe, Pearlstein, Pasin Sloan, Stackhouse, Kara Walker, Warhol, and Weege. The gallery shows a number of current and recent SGCI award winners and keynote speakers: artists include Willie Cole, Nicola Lopez, Jane Hammond, Enrique Chagoya, Karen Kunc, William Wiley, Judy Pfaff, Hung Liu, Lesley Dill, Margo Humphrey, Judith Solodkin, Alison Saar and Frances Myers. Local and regionally known artists and printmakers are also shown at Peltz Gallery.
Russell Jankowski
SUPPORTERS IN PRINT: PATRON
Russ Jankowski has been a steadfast supporter of the arts, printmaking and print collecting. He has served as an active member of the Milwaukee Art Museum’s Print Forum since 1990, as president and a member of its board numerous times since 1993. He has edited the Print Forum Newsletter since 2003 and served as a MAM Print and Drawing Acquisitions subcommittee member for two years. For well over a decade he has organized regular “Print Night Out” events, inviting those who make prints and those who collect prints to regular dinners at changing venues around Milwaukee. He also serves as a docent at the Haggerty Museum of Art, on the board of Redline Milwaukee since 2011, on the board of Boulevard Theater since 2002 and as a board member of Muskego Public Library for 18 years. Jankowski retired from AT&T in 2002 after 33 years of service as senior technical manager. Retirement freed his time and energy for even more generosity in print, art and literacy–related service to his community.
AWARDS + SPEAKERS
David Jones, Anchor Graphics
PRINTMAKER AWARD
David Jones, executive director and master printer of Anchor Graphics, has actively collaborated with and published works for artists such as Eric Avery, Phyllis Bramson, Enrique Chagoya, Sue Coe, Margo Humphrey, Ellen Lanyon, Julio Larraz, Kerry James Marshall, Gladys Nilsson and Jim Nutt, Hollis Sigler, and Karl Wirsum. Printmaker’s collaborative projects include Steve Campbell, Tony Fitzpatrick, Teresa James, Anita Jung and Audrey Niffenegger. The Anchor Graphics facilities, housed on the Columbia College Campus in Chicago, provide student, faculty and community classes and workshops, academic internships, exhibitions, artist residencies, visiting artists lectures, open studio time, and publishing and collaborative projects. For nearly 25 years Anchor Graphics and David Jones’s work as a printer/maker has been integral to printing and print innovation and publishing in the Midwest and nationally. Anchor Graphics also hosted Global Implications SGCI Conference in 2009.
RedLine Milwaukee, Lori Bauman and Steve Vande Zande
COMMUNITY AND MENTORSHIP AWARD
RedLine Milwaukee is an urban laboratory that seeks to nourish the individual practice of contemporary art as it stimulates the creative potential of the local community to which it is linked. Through residency, education, outreach and exhibition programs, with a focus on socially relevant topics, RedLine inspires and influences new generations of cultural and civic transformers. RedLine Milwaukee was founded by local artists Lori Bauman and Steve Vande Zande in October 2009.
Goals of professional development, access and social justice are met through RedLine’s programs: residency, exhibition and education. The 22,000-square-foot building includes exhibition space, artist studios, a community print shop and papermaking studio, a computer lab and classrooms. Milwaukee’s only artist-in-residence program, RedLine houses ten emerging artists, five mentoring artists, a resource artist (Scientist), six teen residents and several visiting artists annually.
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La Ceiba Gráfica: Rafael Ruiz Moreno, Per Anderson and Martin Vinaver
PRINT: COMMUNITY AND SUSTAINABILITY AWARD
La Ceiba Gráfica is located in the mountain town of Coatepe in the state of Veracruz, Mexico, and was founded in 2005 as a nonprofit studio and residency program by the association Artistas Veracruzanos Bajo. La Ceiba Gráfica strives to encourage the creation of art and to contribute to helping the public gain access to the arts and art making regardless of an individual’s economic situation. The residency and print studio is housed in the old Hacienda of La Orduña. Dating back as early as the 16th century, it once existed as a headquarters to the processing of sugarcane and coffee. After many years of being abandoned, a proposal to the government led to the granting of the hacienda to a project of creating an art center whose focus was primarily on graphic arts including lithography, intaglio, Moku Hanga Japanese woodcut, and papermaking.
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“I Had a Blueprint of History,” A Case Study in Livere D’ Artiste Collaboration
Artist, Lesley Dill; poet, Tom Sleigh; papermaker, Paul Wong; printer, Peter Kruty; and publisher, Susan Gosin collaborated for five years to produce a limited-edition book in which the “whole is greater than the sum of its parts.” Beginning with the search for the perfect text, the collaboration became a performance of peers as each contributor responded with distinctive ideas and skills to realize the artist’s concept. Dill worked directly with a master papermaker and printer to translate her 40 masterful images into an editioned book that retains the raw power of her original imagery as it gained in subtlety from the nuances of each process. Besides sharing their war stories and victories, panelists will share the playfulness of working as a team, the intimacy of creating and how the excitement of the experience evolves into a deep appreciation for each other’s gifts and friendship, which ultimately shows in the work itself. Susan Gosin will head the panel as she leads the collaborators in a method similar to a call and response, encouraging the players to engage with each other as a way to show rather than tell how collaboration works.
Is It Something in the Water? The Remarkable Proliferation of Wisconsin Printmakers
The invited presenters will celebrate Wisconsin’s printmaking by introducing the history and scope of Wisconsin-based printmakers to attendees from outside Wisconsin. They will discuss commonalities, themes and significant contributions to education and the field.
Student Panel: Reinventing the Visual Language of Printmaking
This year’s student panel focuses on the process of forming and reinventing the visual language of printmaking. The panelists will discuss how they explore print media by applying diverse materials, tools and emerging technologies, both inside and outside of their studio practices, to further investigate the act of making and how it empowers concepts of print/making.
Thursday, 1:00–2:25 p.m.UWM PSOA, Zelazo 220
PANEL CHAIR:Andrew Kozlowski and Taryn McMahon
PANELISTS:Kristen Necessary, Ashley Hawkins, Jennifer McTague, Katie Hargrave and Morgan Sims
Thursday, 2:45–4:00 p.m.UWM Golda Meir Library, Room 490
PANEL CHAIR:Lane Hall
PANELISTS:Nicolas Lampert, Dan S. Wang and Debora Wood
Community Support: A Roundtable Discussion
Printmaking is often referred to as “democratic,” that its role as an artistic process offers itself to a wider audience because of the dissemination of multiple copies. It seems in recent years young artists have been expanding this idea of printmaking through the establishment of community print studios, collaborative groups, community events and homespun project spaces that offer workshops, access to equipment, exhibition opportunities and microgrants as ways to engage with their peers and their neighborhood. Print artists are imagining more sustainable, affordable and accessible alternatives to academic or other large establishments. The co-chairs will briefly introduce panelists and their respective projects but will dedicate the majority of time to guiding a roundtable discussion that invites audience participation. We will share experiences, suggestions, networks and possibilities and assess current practices.
Viral Vectors: Prints, Resistance, Activism
Viral Vectors should be of interest to anyone interested in the role that prints—with the expanded definition of political posters, letterpress, blogs and integrated media—have played in the Wisconsin Uprising. Wood, former senior curator at the Block Museum, will provide an overview of print- and book–based interventionist strategies and artistic precedent. Lampert, a long-term member of the Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative, will present his collaborative political screen-print posters that became ubiquitous within the landscape of Madison rallies and beyond. Wang, an artist, writer and activist living in Madison, will talk about his robust intermedia practice that fuses letterpress printing, social organization and writing, and Hall, co-founder of the Overpass Light Brigade, will tell the tale of a simple DIY hack who began a Milwaukee-based community-building movement.
Thursday, 10:45–11:45 a.m.UWM PSOA, Zelazo 220
PANEL CHAIR:Sue Gosin
PANELISTS:Lesley Dill, Tom Sleigh, Paul Wong and Peter Kruty
Thursday, 10:45–11:45 a.m.UWM Golda Meir Library, Room 490
PRESENTERS:Brooke Cameron, Jim Escalante, Graeme Reid and Christine Style
Thursday, 1:00–2:25 p.m.UWM Golda Meir Library, Room 490
PANEL CHAIR:Yoko Hattori
PANELISTS:Colin Klimesh and Shaun McCallum
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Voices of Silence
Expanded print media practices as transgressive visual and political territories will be presented as a platform of reflection regarding the “expanded” possibilities of contemporary print media and their role within “silent zones,” zones where graphics/print media have brought greater focus to marginalized issues, giving voice to the silent, to subaltern politics or ecological issues. Through an expanded view of the medium, this panel will evince traditional print media and its repercussions into myriad possibilities including the multiple, installation, sound and other forms.
Collaborative Thinking and Making in the ‘Post Racial’ Digital Atelier
“Post Racial” digital printmaking is an emerging mode of creative practice in which artists integrate traditional matrix creation methods with computer-based manufacturing techniques such as laser cutting, CNC routing and water-jet cutting in the pursuit of creating prints. In the ”Post Racial” Digital Atelier, expertise with ink, presses and paper is united with expertise in machining, computer-aided manufacturing, and digital image processing and programming. The scope of knowledge required is dependent on partnerships among experts from many fields, which has been nurtured by the inherently community-oriented nature of printmaking. This mode of printmaking practice has steadily evolved, especially through collaborations in the context of artist residencies, university research, and commercial fine print studios, as well as through service bureaus. Bringing together several individuals who have developed techniques within each of these contexts, this panel will closely examine a number of case studies, highlighting a range of collaborative models and their creative outcomes.
Thursday
International Panel: Makers in Print
The international panel explores the vitality of printmaking around the world through the work of artists from six countries. Coordinating curators from Argentina, China, Mexico, Poland, South Africa and South Korea were invited to select artists from their respective countries whose work exemplifies the foremost techniques and concepts in the medium. Through the work of these varied printmakers, from Argentina to South Korea, one can identify many similarities and differences in themes, media and aesthetics. Join us for a unique opportunity to engage with these exceptional panelists as they present a lively discourse on techniques, philosophies, attitudes and traditions in the ever-developing world of printmaking.
Friday
Occupy Art
Building on the long history of political printmaking, the global Occupy movement and the collaborative nature of social protests, this session showcases instances of contemporary print-based political actions. The session will include brief presentations by three arts professionals from Kansas, the first state in the nation to eliminate state funding of the arts. Dave Loewenstein will speak about his arts-based community organizing in Kansas and his participation in the Occuprint portfolio.
Rachel Epp Buller will speak about the issues of censorship she encountered when curating the 2012 collaboration-based protest exhibition. Stephen Goddard will present on the recent exhibition Prepared: Strategies for Activists. Following the presentations, we will open up the session for audience dialogue about the roles of printmaking in contemporary political debates. We invite artists to bring examples of and speak about their work, particularly those involved with Occupy movements in Wisconsin and beyond.
Thursday, 2:45–4:00 p.m.UWM PSOA, Art Lecture Hall
PANEL CHAIR:Christa Story
PANELISTS:Zhiyuan Cong, Raoul Deal, Mirta Kupferminc, Wilhelm van Rensburg, Waldek Dynerman and Sang-Mi Yoo
Friday, 10:45–11:45 a.m.MIAD, Room 320
PANEL CHAIR:Dr. Rachel Epp Buller
PANELISTS:Stephen Goddard and Dave Loewenstein
Friday, 10:45–11:45 a.m.MIAD, River Level 80
PANEL CHAIR:Alicia Candiani
PANELISTS:Ayanah Moor, Patricia Villalobos Echeverria and Miguel Angel Rivera
Friday, 10:45–11:45 a.m.MIAD, Room 465E
PANEL CHAIR:Paul Catanese
PANELISTS:Denise Bookwalter, Barbara Foster and Ribouli Digital (Andre Ribuoli and Jennifer Ribuoli)
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Printmaking in Today’s China
America is the leader of international printmaking and the center of modern art, while China is the birthplace of printmaking and a country with a long-standing artistic tradition. One could say that there would not have been any development in American printmaking without the invention of papermaking, printing, bookmaking and multicolor printing in China. So, what is happening in the printmaking field in China today? Leaders of the China National Printmaking Association, professors from China’s foremost art institute for training in printmaking and contemporary artists from China will present themselves, their institutes and their regions’ prints, sharing their educational experiences and promoting the exchange between Eastern and Western printmaking eras.
International Exchanges at Artists Proof Studio
Artist Proof Studio (APS) was founded in 1991 and responded to the challenge of building democracy in a “Post Racial”Apartheid South Africa. It is a community art center in Johannesburg whose mission is to train young financially and educationally disadvantaged artists to achieve self-actualization. The panel will focus on examples of dynamic exchanges with international printmakers, institutions and exhibitions. The panelists will each present a brief synopsis of the focus of their workshops, capacity-building projects and exhibitions in collaboration with APS before opening the floor to a discussion of this ongoing creative exchange.
Theories of Making
In the decades following the rise of abstract expressionism, artists increasingly pushed the boundaries of what could be conceived as art and, by extension, what could be considered artistic labor. Movements and approaches such as Fluxus, conceptual art, process art and performance art often privileged idea over execution, or more accurately, created a different proposition as to what constitutes an art-making process than what was conventionally understood as skill acquisition. In this context, many college-level visual art courses abandoned traditional approaches to teaching, resulting in various forms of “de-skilling.” Emphasis was often placed on letting students “discover themselves” in the absence of a systematic overview of processes and materials, or questions of how to make art were considered secondary to theoretical or conceptual reasons for why to make art. Printmaking has generally remained committed to its historical and craft traditions, and sometimes its reputation has suffered within the hierarchies of the art world as a consequence. This session will offer some theoretical frameworks for making art, arguing for the value of a “theories of making” that does not eschew craft but positions it as a vital component of a creative practice.
Friday, 1:00–2:25 p.m.MIAD, Room 320
PANEL CHAIR:Kim Berman
PANELISTS:Pamala Allara, Peter Scott, Rhoda Rosenberg and Eileen Foti
Friday, 1:00–2:25 p.m.MIAD, Room 465E
PRESENTERS:Beauvais Lyons and Beth Grablowski
Friday, 2:45–4:00 p.m.MIAD, Room 320
PANEL CHAIR:Zhiyuan Cong
PANELISTS:Guirong Lou and Chao Chen
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Friday, 1:00–2:25 p.m.MIAD, River Level 80
PRESENTER: Andrea Ferber
Friday, 1:00–2:25 p.m.MIAD, River Level 80
PRESENTER: Erik Brunvand
Friday, 1:00–2:25 p.m.MIAD, River Level 80
PRESENTER: Noel W. Anderson
Nancy Spero, Anti-Painter
American artist Nancy Spero abandoned oil painting on canvas in 1964 and traditional approaches to painting altogether in 1970. Spero’s chosen materials were deliberately fragile, transient and undervalued; she worked on paper, and her installations were usually temporary. The relationship between the materiality of her works and her feminist political convictions is inseparable. This presentation describes how this artist’s unique use of printmaking extended the conceptual import of her subjects.
Automated Drawing: Blurring the Line between Print and Drawing
Automated drawing machines are mechanical mechanisms that make drawings, typically drawing directly on the substrate using pens, pencils, charcoal or other traditional implements. Drawing and printmaking are close cousins in the world of works on paper. One main distinguishing feature is the possibility of making editions of prints. But what about drawings made through automated means? These are drawings in that they are images applied directly to the paper, but they are also editionable because they can be replicated. In this paper, I will survey a history of drawing machines and talk about how modern printmakers have adapted drawing machines to many uses. Recently a number of artists have begun to use these machines to make editioned drawings. I will show examples of contemporary work in this direction, including my own.
Printmaking in a “Post Racial” Condition
This presentation seeks to describe the personal use of traditional and contemporary printmaking in expressing a contemporary African American communal perspective. In a “‘Post Racial’–everything” world, how does one make specified distinctions? What is black, a print, everything and nothing? My research attempts to define a series of terms. First, it attempts to define tapestries in the digital age as prints, through editions and reabsorption into printmaking through the use of traditional processes. My scholarship also attempts to utilize a historically exclusionary practice as a strategy to include the very voices that were once ousted.
Chasing Dreams: Printing Teaching and Collaboration in Havana and HanoiScenarios play themselves out in a thousand different ways in Cuba and Vietnam, teaching me that there are vast differences in culture, ethos of work ethic, artistic vision and negotiation, and time management. Living where innovation is a means of survival, the art of conversation is enjoyed as a natural rhythm to the day, transportation is rough at best, and crisis is a daily occurrence; time has very little to do with the clock. With all my collaborations, there are two goals. First, to create a shared story and second, to place these books into collections and distribute the profits back to the individuals who helped make them. In this presentation, I will discuss collaborative book projects and printmaking experiences in Havana and Hanoi.
From Pop-Up to Permanent
This paper explores how to transform a project from pop-up to permanent. What are the ways PRESS: Letterpress as a Public Art Project can raise awareness and appreciation of print media? How does the public performance of printing inspire, speak to and transform the way the public experiences print media? PRESS houses the only Vandercook Letterpress open to the public in a gallery setting outside of museums in the state of Massachusetts. Having such a unique resource affords PRESS the opportunity to continue offering community workshops, poetry readings, exhibitions and open-studio opportunities to area and visiting artists—in addition to general observation of the printing process. Some of these events are programmed, designed and implemented by students. Students attend and participate as well. Specific examples of student and community projects that raise awareness and appreciation will be outlined further in the paper.
Thursday, 1:00–1:30 p.m.UWM PSOA, Art Lecture Hall
PRESENTER: Steven C. Daiber
Thursday, 1:45–2:15 p.m.UWM PSOA, Art Lecture Hall
PRESENTER: Melanie Mowinski
PROJECTS
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Quad/Graphics: Augmented Reality
Wisconsin’s premier commercial and interactive print provider is excited to open its augmented reality platform to creative experimentation and play at Print:MKE. Augmented reality (AR) creates a bridge between our physical world and virtual worlds, holding the promise of changing the way we interact with information and the world around us. In this sequence of three, four-hour workshops, hosted by Quad/Graphics as well as MIAD students and faculty, conference participants will learn to create content that responds to and layers an audience’s experience of original and preexisting 2D and 3D artworks. Learn the ins and outs of what makes an image trackable and how to connect 3D models, information graphics, animations and videos to scannable imagery. This series of workshops will culminate in an interactive installation on view the weekend of the conference.
Justseeds: Uprisings: Images of Labor
In conjunction with the Justseeds print installation, various members from Justseeds will give talks about their practice, activist art, radial art history and various print-related projects in North America and beyond. Each talk will be 30 minutes, and the series will run for two days (Friday, March 22 and Saturday, March 23) from 9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Stop by and join the conversation.
Justseeds SGC project involves turning the gallery into a print factory. Print editions based on the theme of labor hang from the sky, individual and collaborative work occurs on the ground, and artists align their work with local and international social justice movements. Included in the evolving installation is Justseeds artists, the Combat Paper Project, guest artists, and a two-day schedule of artists’ talks and discussions about art and activism. All talks are free and open to the public.
Saturday 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.MIAD, Room 199
ARTISTS:Eric Fuertes, John Medina, Andrew Smith and Ross Turner
Friday 1:00–5:00 p.m.
Saturday 10:00 a.m.–1:00 p.m.
MIAD, Room 270
Death Metal Press!
Death Metal Press will unleash fire and brimstone upon all that attend the 2013 SGCI Conference. Forged by the devil himself, Death Metal Press will be wielding the most sinister printing press that man has ever witnessed. Utilizing fire as an energy source, cast metal “woodblocks” and the mechanical actions of a letterpress gone mad, they will forever burn images into your mind, paper and soul.
Film Screening: Midwest Matrix: Genealogy of American Printmaking: Oral History of the “Post Racial”–World War II Midwest Movement
Executive Producer and Director, Susan Goldman, founder of Midwest Matrix LLC, presents her first one hour long documentary, Midwest Matrix: Genealogy of American Printmaking: Oral History of the Post-World War II Midwest Movement. This is a substantive study of post-WWII printmaking that documents synergy among Midwest universities, workshops, and their participants. Many of these artists, who are now in their eighties and nineties, were able to continue their education through the passing of the GI Bill. Midwest Matrix allows these artists, many whom have never before been filmed, to provide accounts of their experiences, their training, their involvement with the development of print departments and studios, their art, and encounters with students.
Midwest Matrix is sponsored in part with the generous support from the National Endowment for the Arts, Hand Print Workshop International, Lily Press; The Anne and Ronald Abramson Family Foundation, Michael Gross, Owens Technologies, Inc., SGC International, and the International Fine Print Dealer Association Foundation.
Friday 11:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.
Saturday 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
MIAD, Room 250A/B/C and 245
March 21–March 29UWM Union Gallery
ARTIST TALKS/PRESENTATIONS: Friday, March 22 and Saturday, March 23, 9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., free and open to the public
PROJECTS
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William Kentridge Projects: DK Printshop
This special presentation will showcase the state proofs and matrices for William Kentridge’s recent projects at David Krut Projects in Johannesburg, South Africa. Kentridge’s primary printers, Jillian Ross and Mlungasi Kongisa, will share their experiences working with William and behind-the-scenes stories of how many of the images for The Nose and his newest series, Universal Archive, developed, from the inception of the project to its completion, the technical details, how the pieces fit together and overall what it is, was, and is now like working with William Kentridge.
Bike Print:MKE: Cycling, Printmaking, Community
Organized by Jeremy Plunkett, this project is a collaborative effort of conference goers and community to spread awareness and find “cyclical” similarities in the world of printmaking and bicycling. The bicycle is a simple and instinctive way to facilitate transportation and city exploration and to record traces via photographs/stories of Milwaukee’s urban landscape. When connecting cycling and printmaking, we can realize that both media involve the nature of revolving and hard work, can be very affordable to do, make for healthy lifestyles, involve grease, gears and human propulsion, are community, and are flows that keep society moving.
People will gather at UWM’s Spaghts Plaza, near the Studio Arts and Craft Center, Union Courtyard, where bicycles and participants can make project-specific cycling tire-related prints. Following the printing session, bicycling enthusiasts are welcome to join the coordinating artists in a ride from UWM’s main campus to the Kenilworth Square campus for the Open Portfolio event, where the exchange portfolio inspired by this idea will be on display.
https://www.facebook.com/events/401024403326352/?fref=ts
Quiet Revolution Milwaukee
As a continuation of his internationally recognized work, The Quiet Revolution, South African-based artist Richard John Forbes will be traveling to Milwaukee to complete a special project with UWM art and design students. Large copper plates will be installed in a public space at Kenilworth Studios on March 21. A variety of handcrafted sculptural tops (made by the artist and PSOA students prior to the event) will be available and free to be used by those who attend the participatory and generative happening. Viewers will spin the tops on copper plates, engraving a field of spiraled marks of the surface of the copper. The plates will be inked and printed as an edition of hand-pulled fine art prints on paper. The project emphasizes the abandonment of control and the onset of an interactive yet autonomous process.
Printing project: Thursday, 2:35–4:00 p.m.
Ride: 4:00–5:00 p.m.
UWM Spaights Plaza, near the Studio Arts and Craft Center, UWM Union
Thursday, 7:00–9:00 p.m. at Kenilworth Square East (KSE), 3rd Floor
Thursday, 1:00–2:25 p.m. and 2:35–4:00 p.m.
PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 302
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The Nitty Gritty of Carborundum Intaglio
This workshop demonstrates the making and printing of carborundum intaglio plates using a variety of methods, including different grits of carborundum mixed with liquid gel medium, modeling paste and other adhesives. See how to build surfaces and add texture using tools and different materials. The printing demonstration also covers the mixing of inks, additives, wiping methods, chine collé, overprinting with different colors and the addition of drypoint. Many plates and prints are ready to view as examples, demonstrating the possibilities this medium offers.
Image Printing on the Vandercook Press: Printing and Coloring Secrets Revealed
In this demonstration workshop, master printer Peter Kruty will reenact several of the simple yet beguiling techniques he and his colleague, Sayre Gaydos, used to create Lesley’s distinctive and magical imagery. Some of the topics covered will include scanning of wash drawings for photopolymer plates, creating differing ink “personalities” when mixing and printing, applying water-based and polyurethane paper staining, achieving dense letterpress printing on “dry” abaca and cotton paper, surprinting on printed tints, ink smearing and, everyone’s favorite, archival collage. Not just for the printer/practitioner, this demonstration workshop should appeal to all who in their love of ink on paper find new, and perhaps deeper, mysteries once the mysteries are revealed.
Moku Hanga: Japanese Wood Block Printing
As an ancient technique developed in the Orient, Moku Hanga pooled from nature’s gifts, using earth as pigments, rice paste as its fixative, bamboo for tools, plants for making printing paper and the ingenuity of the artist to put it all together. It is now widely known through its Ukiyo-E images by masters such as Utamaro and Hiroshige. Martin Vinaver, from Mexico’s graphic arts center La Ceiba Gráfica, will talk about the technique and its availability to the western artist and art student.
Thursday, 1:00–2:25 p.m. and 2:35–4:00 p.m.UWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 390
Chika Ito
Thursday, 1–2:25 p.m. and 2:35–4:00 p.m.UWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 403
Kim Gatesman
Thursday, 1:00–2:25 p.m.UWM Fine Arts Building, Room 345
Rhoda Rosenberg (lead) and Max Colby (assisting)
Thursday, 1:00–2:25 p.m. and 2:35–4:00 p.m.UWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 336
Peter Kruty
Thursday, 1:00–2:25 p.m. and 2:35–4:00 p.m.UWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 179
Martin Vinaver
Pastemaking for Printmakers: Silkscreen Printing
Chika Ito demonstrates pastemaking with different kinds of starch (wheat, rice, etc.) and materials (colorants from plants, etc.). Paste can be used as a base for ink and combined with many other printmaking techniques. Using paste in printmaking and other art, especially on paper, is a Japanese tradition. It is sustainable and very stable over time. Pastemaking is low cost and low technique, and using paste is low impact to the environment and less harmful to printmakers. Ito has been printing silkscreen with paste-based ink for the past five years.
A Homemade Printmaker
This demonstration teaches how to build a small safe and sufficient print studio through a collection of homemade tools and repurposed industrial methods. Gatesman illustrates how the creativity used in the studio can be employed to build and improve the studio itself. This demonstration looks at how to use the maker mindset as the inspiration behind the creative problem solving needed to build a studio from scratch. This also promotes the idea that limited circumstances (studio space, safety concerns, etc.) do not need to be restricted in the pursuit of goals. The demonstration includes a variety of tools and tricks developed for a small home-based printmaking studio. The materials and procedures are nontoxic and include an electrolytic etching system and a homemade etching press, among other things. The entire demonstration setup will fit into two custom-built shipping crates—further illustrating how concise your studio can be.
DEMOS
DEMOS
The Unique Print: Monotyping Wisconsin Style
Using a variety of different matrices, transfer techniques and registration methods, this demonstration embraces printmaking’s creative side. Fresh Hot Press, UWM’s printmaking club, presents a demo focusing on monotype processes. Club president, Galen Gibson-Cornell, and officers Maren Munoz and Greg Luckeroth will be leading the charge, and audience members are encouraged to participate in the making. This demonstration starts with a litho stone, a photoplate and a sheet of plexiglass. A multirun image will be created using each matrix, exploring creative inking strategies, innovative registration and alternative printing methods. Participants will play with colors and ink modifiers and found objects. The demonstration encourages thinking outside of the traditional norms of printing, taking risks and discovering a new look on making.
Century Plate Lithography
Century Plate technology is one of the biggest breakthroughs in the teaching and practice of fine art lithography in the past 50 years. It is now possible to reuse just one inexpensive heavy-gauge aluminum plate hundreds of times for hundreds of editions. Printmakers can easily register and print multiple-color lithographs, combining crayon drawings, reticulated toner washes, flats, halftones, digital images, found objects and even oil-based paint markers using just one Century Plate! When this capability is combined with new biodegradable solvents and materials for processing the plates, there is no need for hazardous acids, asphaltum, Red Lacquer V or Lithotine . . . although all of them will work on Century Plates.
A Painterly Approach to Intaglio
White ground etching offers an immediate, nontoxic way to create intaglio prints that can combine line, wash, tone, texture and transferred imagery from other surfaces in one process. Artists can work additively or subtractively with a variety of creative tools to produce subtly rich prints. White ground is a semipermeable, water-based ground that breaks down when it is applied progressively thinner (as a wash) on the plate or completely resists biting when opaque. Because the ground is made with soap, images can immediately be removed with water. The technique allows one to go back and add or subtract more white ground once dry. Because the ground is white, one is not working with reverse values as with traditional hard grounds.
UWM Digital Craft Research Lab
3D printing, laser cutting and other CNC technologies are becoming more accessible for the production of art, and the Digital Craft Research Lab of UWM invites you to explore the possibilities of digital fabrication. The goal of the Digital Craft Research Lab (DCRL) is to foster innovative, creative research in the areas of design, craft and art by combining advanced digital technology with traditional craft practices in an effort to educate students for the future. The DCRL fosters interdisciplinary design research, material research and innovation through making. As printmakers and artists, we look forward to contributing new ideas and innovations to our current practice as we share information with other makers. The lab features the work of designers and printmakers who have adapted the potentials of this technology to their practice. We invite you to share in our experiences through demonstrations and examples that will be shown in the lab.
Thursday, 2:35–4:00 p.m.UWM PSOA, Fine Arts Building, Room 345
Ed Bernstein and Keegan Adams, assisting
Thursday, 7:00–9:00 p.m.UWM PSOA, KSE, Room 368
Frankie Flood and Jay Fox
Friday, 1:00–2:25 p.m.MIAD, Room 345
Fresh Hot Press(Club president: Galen Gibson-Cornell; officers: Greg Luckeroth and Maren Munoz)
Friday, 1:00–2:25 p.m.MIAD, Room 360
Kate Conlon
DEMONSTRATIONS
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DEMOS
DEMOS
Multiple-Plate Printing for Intaglio
San Francisco Crown Point Press master printer Ianne Kjorlie and printer Fanny Retsek demonstrate how to create a multiple-plate etching from start to finish, featuring Robert Bechtle’s 2011 soft ground and aquatint etching, Three Houses on Pennsylvania Avenue. This is a complex six-plate print, which demands tight registration within the image. This demonstration shows how the artist built and evolved his print in the Crown Point studio and explains the techniques used by the printers to set up a system that enabled the artist to draw the multiple-plate realist image on six plates, each plate in register with the others. Kjorlie and Retsek will then print Bechtle’s Three Houses on Pennsylvania Avenue to demonstrate Crown Point’s inking and hand-wiping techniques, and jig-based printing registration system. This method allows you to print a complex multiple-plate image with precise registration every time.
Three Bridges
Three Bridges is a collaborative installation by more than 30 students and faculty from Ohio University, Northern Illinois University and the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. The concept of three bridges references the Milwaukee Bridge War of 1845, among early settlers of the city. By creating a printed city at 1:50 scale, the project allows the participants to create three sections of an ideal city linked by bridges. This city is an ideal place for printmakers, where advertisement for ink and press manufacturers appear on billboards and the sides of buildings.
Velvetint on Copper and Zinc
Velvetint not only produces rich and fine mezzotint or aquatint results but also is easier for students to master and eliminates the risks of breathing finely powdered rosin as well as toxic fumes generated from melting rosin onto plates. Simply brush coat plates with a self-leveling, high-resolution photo coating made with a vegetable-based solvent and expose a stochastic screen onto it. Develop it in an aqueous-based developer and etch it. This process is featured in the new studio textbook, Printmaking Revolution, by Dwight Pogue (released May 2012 by Watson-Guptill).
Mokulito—Wood Lithography
The original process of lithography, developed by Alois Senefelder, has been expanded through the use of zinc and aluminum. Traditional lithography continues to be a vital art form for artists who practice printmaking, and especially those who entertain painting and drawing. How about using wood as a printing matrix for lithography? There have been innovations with Waterless Lithography and other processes that are being researched as alternatives. Join a presentation of a relatively new printmaking process developed by Ozaku Schisi, professor from the University of Tama Bijutsu, Japan, that has realized further development in Poland. This alternative process using wood has great potential for combining processes of relief and lithography. As the future of printmaking continues to expand, we will no doubt witness this technique being incorporated into printmaking curriculums and professional studios throughout the United States.
Friday, 2:35–4:00 p.mMIAD, Room 360
Lauren Bennett
Friday, 2:35–4:00 p.m.MIAD, Room 345
Jeffery Sippel (lead) and Ewa Budka (assisting)
Friday, 1:00–4:00 p.m.MIAD, Room 335
Ianne Kjorlie and Fanny Retsek, Crown Point Press
Friday, 1:00–4:00 p.m.MIAD, River Level, East Gallery
Koichi Yamamoto, Assistant Professor at UT Knoxville
Karla Hackenmiller, Associate Professor at Ohio University
Michael Barnes, Professor at Northern Illinois University
DEMONSTRATIONS
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DEMOS
DEMOS
Picnic Table Printmaking
Printmaking has a long and colorful history, intimately engaged with technological advances. As we move through the 21st century, the digital era adds another layer of dialogue to the already complex stew of hybrid printmaking. In this demonstration, we will show a range of techniques on a variety of substrates that do not require a press, harmful acids or toxic solvents. We will be showing nonpress transfer techniques that can be done on wood, metal, fabrics and paper among other materials. They will appeal to artists who have limited or no access to a press or are interested in pushing the boundaries, both technically and conceptually, of printmaking. They can be used by themselves or with a variety of traditional printmaking techniques. This has the potential to appeal to not only printmakers but also to artists working in handmade paper, sculpture and textile arts and to book artists, to name but a few. And because the techniques range from very simple to complex, art educators working with children can avail themselves of these nontoxic transfer techniques with any age group. We plan to begin with the simple techniques and allow for audience participation. We will allow 30 to 45 minutes for each technique and 10 to 15 minutes for the demonstration, and the rest of the time will be used for audience participation.
Make/Do: Building Your Own Low-Cost Printing Press with Easily Accessible Materials
After attending a workshop on installation art at Anderson Ranch Arts Center in the summer of 2011, Michael Smoot decided to build his own printing press using only materials he found at the local hardware store and common hand tools (drill, saw, wrenches, etc.). After two weeks of tinkering, the press was complete and had cost approximately $300 in materials. See the press in action at this demonstration, plus watch a video of how it was built and get instructions for making your own. Smoot sees sharing his plans as a way to allow fellow printmakers to spread a shared appreciation of the medium, and he bases his demonstration on the innovation and collaborative spirit that is found in the open-source technology community, attributes he feels the printmaking community also shares.
Layer Upon Layer Upon Layer: Cool Paper, Hot Glass and Other Stuff
This presentation will illustrate creating multilayered prints using archival inkjet prints on Asian papers, traditional prints, natural dyes and mixed media supports. Included will be a PowerPoint presentation, simple hands-on demonstrations and showing of finished prints and works in progress.
Friday, 1:00–4:00 p.m.MIAD, Room 325
Michael Smoot
Friday, 1:00–2:25 p.m. and 2:35–4 p.m.MIAD, Room 230
Robert Erikson, Kristin Theilking and Kevin Brunett
Friday, 1:00–2:25 p.m. and 2:35–4:00 p.m.MIAD, Room 315
Stacy Elko, Associate Professor,Denise Bean, MFA Candidate, James Chase, MFA Candidate, TTU School of Art
DEMONSTRATIONS
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DEMOS
DEMOS
Death Metal Press!
I heard, as it were the noise of thunderous rock n’ roll, one of the four beasts saying, “Come and see . . . YEE-HAA!!!” And I saw and beheld a Death Metal Printing Press: and he that commanded such a machine had a torch and cast metal woodblocks; and a fire was given unto him: and he went forth printing, and to print. (Fuertes 06:66:13)
Death Metal Press will bring its own form of reckoning to the 2013 SGC International conference and to all attendees who are righteous enough to behold such a sight. Artists Eric Fuertes, John Medina, Andrew Smith and Ross Turner will be wielding the most sinister printing press that man has ever witnessed. Forged by the Devil himself, Death Metal Press will be commanding fire as its servant to superheat “woodblocks” that have been molded and cast from molten metal. These metal “woodblocks” still possess all of the physical characteristics needed to create a relief print. However, they now have ascended to the right hand of the Periodic Table, which will enable them to be supercharged to about 700 degrees Fahrenheit. Death Metal Press will then substitute the press bed roller as the primary energy source to transfer a printed image to a substrate and supplement that energy with fire/heat. The heat source will not only replace the linear pound-force per square inch pressure needed to create a printed image, but it will also eliminate ink as a medium. The press in theory will then be a self-“inking” printing press that will create imagery mimicking a single color run relief print. The idea is modeled after early forms of letterpresses and a foundry device known as a core machine (creates sand molds through the use of patterns and heat). The idea transcends simply creating a big, efficient stamp or branding tool; it connects two of the most revolutionary industrial techniques known to man, foundry and printmaking. The amalgamation of these two industrial processes to academia/art has been vital tools/processes that have assisted many artists in finding their own means to expression. Harnessing fire as the energy source/ink, cast metal “woodblocks” and the mechanical actions of a letterpress gone mad, they will forever burn images into your mind, paper and soul.
Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.MIAD, Room 199
Eric Fuertes, John Medina, Andrew Smith and Ross Turner
DEMONSTRATIONS
NOTES
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EVENTS
EVENTS
WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20
Opening receptions at MIAD and Inova
5:00–8 p.m.
Ending with the Kickoff Party at Alterra on Prospect Ave.
THURSDAY, MARCH 21
Open Portfolio
6:00–10:00 p.m.
UWM PSOA KSE
The Open Portfolio Session is an opportunity for artists to present their work to a broad audience. This popular event allows many people to display their work and an even broader audience to view the presented work.
Open Portfolio will take place on Thursday, March 21 from 6:00–10:00 p.m. at the Peck School of the Arts’ Kenilworth Square East, a building of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. There will be three floors of exhibition space this year, and 3 sessions, each running 70 minutes. Each participant will be assigned a table for one session. In addition to the opportunity to meet and view the work of potentially hundreds of artists, this fun evening event will feature live music, food, and beverages.
Kenilworth Square East: Graduate and Faculty Open House
6:00–10:00 p.m.
UWM PSOA KSE
KSE Open House is an opportunity for the entire SGCI community to experience the work created by Peck School of the Arts faculty and students. Everyone is invited to peek “behind the scenes” into studios and research labs, where the artistic spirit cultivates and grows into creative expression.
Riverwest Gallery Hop and Block Party
7:30–10:00 p.m.
Exhibition Opening Receptions
Imagination Giants: 901 E. Wright Street, Milwaukee
Jazz Gallery Center for the Arts: 926 E. Center Street, Milwaukee
Woodland Pattern Book Center: 720 E. Locust Street, Milwaukee
Rock the Block
8:00–11:30 p.m.
Falcon Bowl (Polish Falcon), 801 E. Clarke St., Milwaukee
Rock the Block is a student-driven event born from the combined forces of students of the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design and the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. We’ll be showing off the best of Milwaukee on Thursday night with an eclectic celebration showcasing local talent with student work, music, games and performances in true block-party fashion. Come witness an experience that stimulates all the senses. Let some of Milwaukee’s finest inkers welcome you to the neighborhood for a good old-fashioned print party, beverages included.
50THANNIVERSARY!
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EVENTS
EVENTS
FRIDAY, MARCH 22
Print Crawl
5:00–8:00 p.m.
Several of Milwaukee’s finest art galleries and alternative spaces
A shuttle bus will be available to downtown locations for your convenience during the conference
Come One, Come All to the SGCI Gallery Night Print Crawl!
Crawl into the experience of print media through the multiple forms of printmaking, such as lithography, intaglio, screen printing and relief, as well as through its nontraditional components. Through a range of unique styles, techniques and methods, you will be challenged to open your “print” senses and explore works of art by remarkable artists who fearlessly approach their art through printmaking.
Several of Milwaukee’s finest art galleries and alternative spaces will be hosting a plethora of print-based exhibitions and works by distinguished printmakers, both national and international: Marshall Building Galleries, Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design, Katie Gingrass Gallery, Tory Folliard Gallery, Dean Jensen Gallery, Rogues Gallery, Pfister Hotel, Delind Fine Art Gallery, Peltz Gallery, Charles Allis Museum, Inova Gallery, Milwaukee Art Museum, and many many more.
Join us for a great night filled with art and a celebration of print media.
MAM after Dark: Mad Men
7:00–11:00 p.m.
Milwaukee Art Museum 700 N. Art Museum Drive, Milwaukee
Join us for a “Mad Men”–themed happening at the Milwaukee Art Museum, offering not-to-be-missed programs including a gallery tour of the Color Rush exhibition at 8:00 p.m. and a gallery dialogue with William Kentridge’s printers to talk about his life, work, process, community and collaborations. View The Nose exhibition at 9:00 p.m. See a specially curated exhibition from the Milwaukee Art Museum Print Collection. Event comes complete with music, food, a cash bar, a DIY station, a photo booth and more. Special $8 admission fee for SGCI Conference attendees. Please preregister or show your badge at the door.
The gallery talk in the Kentridge exhibition (The Nose) is at 9:00 p.m. Milwaukee-based artist Nathaniel Stern will introduce Jillian Ross and Mlungisi Kongis of David Krut Print Workshop (DKW), Johannesburg. They will share their experiences working with William Kentridge between 2006 and 2013—from The Nose (2006–2010) to Scribble Cat (2010), up until the latest series of linocuts, Universal Archive (2011–2013). They will provide behind-the-scenes stories of how many of the images developed, from the inception of the project to its completion, the technical details, and overall what it was like and is now like working with the artist.
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EVENTS
EVENTS
SATURDAY, MARCH 23 Shuttles will be looping between MIAD, UWM, Milwaukee Art Museum and Discovery World throughout the day on Saturday.
Buses are first come first serve and will leave promptly at the scheduled time.
Lynden Sculpture Garden Bus Tour
10:00 a.m. (departs)–2:30 p.m. (returns)Departing from UWM
The Lynden Sculpture Garden
The Lynden Sculpture Garden offers a unique experience of art in nature through its collection of more than 50 monumental sculptures sited across 40 acres of park, lake and woodland. Jessica Meuninck-Ganger and Nathaniel Stern will show the most recent fruits of their collaboration. In addition to works that fuse printmaking and video, they will be showing a three-dimensional work related to the screen-based work and a new installation in the porch windows at Lynden that continues their exploration of surfaces, layers, membranes, matrices and the physical relationship between viewer and object. Also on view will be prints from the Bradley Family Foundation collection. Also included are a gallery dialogue with Richard Grusin and Wilhelm Van Rensburg and a paper-varnishing demonstration by Yoko Hattori and Pickle Palmer.
Haggerty Museum of Art, RedLine Milwaukee, Milwaukee County Historical Society Bus Tour
10:15 a.m. (departs)–2:30 p.m. (returns) Departing from UWM
Haggerty Museum of Art
Join Emilia Layden, associate curator, at the Haggerty Museum of Art for a tour of its ranging exhibitions:
Enrique Chagoya’s Codex Prints Read Between the Lines comprises editioned, accordion-folded artist books and the preparatory drawings and trial proofs created during their fabrication.
Other exhibitions include Perimeter, Photographs by Kevin J.Miyazaki, Images of the Virgin Mary, and Dark Blue: The Water as Protagonist.
RedLine Milwaukee
Curators’ talk: 1:00 p.m.Printshop and RedLine Tours: 10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m.
Recipients of the host-defined Print: Community and Mentorship Award, RedLine Milwaukee was founded by local artists Lori Bauman and Steve Vande Zande in October 2009. Goals of professional development, access and social justice are met through RedLine’s programs: Residency, Exhibition and Education. The 22,000-square-foot building includes exhibition space, artist studios, a community printshop and papermaking studio, a computer lab and classrooms. Milwaukee’s only artist-in-residence program, RedLine houses ten emerging artists, five mentoring artists, a resource artist (Scientist), six teen residents and several visiting artists annually. Additionally, RedLine connects artists with community organizations through workshops, classes and outreach.Redline is a diverse urban laboratory where art, education and community converge. Our vision is to foster forms of social practice in the arts that inspire inquiry and catalyze change.
RedLine Milwaukee’s in-house “green” community printshop offers the city a traditional printmaking facility, fully equipped for intaglio, relief, monoprint and silkscreen. The shop is a vital resource to the RedLine resident artists and teens, visiting artists, teachers, and printmakers in the Milwaukee community who use the shop to create in the historically rich medium of print.
Sustenance: Progressive Printmaking Now, featuring artists Kerri Cushman, Waldek Dynerman, Melissa Gill, John Hitchcock, Mary Hood, Ina Kaur, Monika Meler, Jessica Meuninck-Ganger, Phyllis McGibbon, Kristina Paabus, Ryan Parker, Kathryn Reeves, Meredith Setser, Megan St. Clair, Fahimeh Vadhat and Rina Yoon.
Please join us for the opening reception for Sustenance: Progressive Printmaking Now, Saturday, March 23, from 12:00–3:00 p.m. Redline Milwaukee is a 501(c)3 nonprofit public charity. www.redlineartmke.org
Milwaukee County Historical Society
FORUM Veteran Print Project pairs printmakers with veterans and encourages them to have a discussion about veterans’ military experience. Together, with the Wisconsin American GI Forum (WI-AGIF), a Latino veteran group based in Milwaukee, artists from around the country will visually interpret this dialogue. Veteran Print Project seeks to bring two divergent groups, veterans and artists, together to express the historical experiences of a new generation of veterans through the traditional methods of fine art print, opening an ongoing dialogue between these two groups.
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EVENTS
EVENTS
Walkers Point Arts District Bus Tour (WPCA and UCC)
10:15 a.m. (departs)–2:30 p.m. (returns)
Departing from MIAD
United Community Center Centro de la Communidad Unida
Exhibition: Ni de aquí, ni de alla/from neither here nor there, Artist Raoul Deal will conduct a gallery talk about the research behind his exhibit of large-format woodcuts based on interviews done with families from Milwaukee’s Latino immigrant community.
Walkers Point Center for the Arts
Exhibition: La Ceiba Gráfica
A portfolio of contemporary lithographs curated by Per Anderson, Rafael Ruiz and Martin Vinaver of La Ceiba Gráfica, a top-ranking printmaking workshop located in Veracruz, Mexico, whose mission supports the need for artistic creation regardless of an individuals’ social condition.
Presentation: Moku Hanga: Japanese wood block printing
As an ancient technique developed in the Orient, Moku Hanga is pooled from nature’s gifts, using earth as pigments, rice paste as fixative, bamboo for tools, plants for making printing paper, utilizing the ingenuity of the artist to put it all together. It is now widely known through its Ukiyo-E images by masters such as Utamaro and Hiroshige. Martin Vinaver, co-founder of La Ceiba Gráfica, will talk about the technique and its availability to the Western artist and art student.
Presentation: Lithography: Recovery and Transformation at La Ceiba Gráfica
Per Andersen, co-founder of La Ceiba Gráfica, will give a brief but thorough history of lithography in Europe and the United States, and speak about La Ceiba Gráfica’s adaption of the medium to the local materials readily available in Mexico. In addition to the milling of Mexican marble, printing-press construction, and roller and ink fabrication, Andersen will talk about his research in papermaking and the experimentation guiding his efforts to turn La Ceiba Gráfica into an innovative, self-sufficient professional lithography studio.
Bayview Arts District: Sweet Water Organic, Sky High Gallery, and Jenie Gao Studio and Gallery Bus Tour
10:45 a.m. (departs)–3:00 p.m. (returns)
Departing from MIAD
Jenie Gao Studio and Gallery
Join Jenie in Jenie Gao’s Studio and Gallery, and receive a special viewing of her exhibition Winter Garden: The grass is greener on the other side because there’s more bullsh** over there. The show will feature the print artwork of several artists, live printing and a special surprise for attendees.
Sky High Gallery
Sky High Gallery is a unique space curated by Faythe Levine (creator/author of Handmade Nation), located in the skate shop owned by Aaron Polansky. They share a common vision for making their city a better place by building community through art, creativity and events centered around their neighborhood in the Bay View neighborhood of Milwaukee. Both the gallery and skate shop host events year round. Please check back for updates. Exhibition: Little Friends of Printmaking: A Selection of New Prints and Objects.
Sweet Water Organic
Exhibition: Collective (Print) Action: Political Print Portfolios
Collective (Print) Action: Political Print Portfolios by Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative
Sweet Water Organic, 2151 S. Robinson Avenue, Milwaukee
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EVENTS
EVENTS
Milwaukee Art Museum
Tours at 1:00 p.m. and 2:00 p.m.
Located on the Mezzanine Level of the Museum
Take a tour of the Herzfeld Study Center, where the Museum houses its impressive collection of works on paper.
Awards Ceremony and Closing Party
Saturday, March 23, 6:00–11:00 p.m.
Discovery World, 500 N. Harbor Drive, Milwaukee
Located on the shores of beautiful Lake Michigan, Discovery World hosts our final hoorah! The evening will feature the presentation of awards by SGCI, as well as fabulous local music, delectable hors d’oeuvres, adult beverages, the Reiman Aquarium, Great Lakes Future exhibits and the Kohl’s Design It! Features the Mobile Lab, where you get to try your hand at lasercutting. Awards ceremony free; closing party tickets $30.
Discovery World
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THEMED
PORTFOLIOS
THEMED
PORTFOLIOS
Mind the Gap, Tim Abel and Sara Parr, organizers
In this translation through process, a visual work will be the point of origin for poets and fiction writers to create a written work, in which printmakers have the task of revisualizing. Through this collaboration between the printed word and printed image, this portfolio plays with and highlights the process of making connections across genres.
Printmakers: Tim Abel (co-curator), Cynthia Lollis, Francesca Narvaez, Edie Overturf, Sara Parr (co-curator), Joanne Price, Melissa Wagner-Lawler, Jody Williams and Connie Wolfe
Writers: Colleen Abel, Brenda Cardenas, Ching-In Chen, Rebecca Dunham, MC Hyland, Rachel Haley Himmelheber, Daniel Johnson, Brandi Reissenweber and Rachel Jamison Webster
The Average Path Length, Fawn Atencio
Small-world experiments designed by Stanley Milgram and other researchers in the 1960s examined the size and connectedness of social networks of people in the United States. The first annual Average Path Length portfolio exchange explores these ideas of connectedness by having invitees invite additional participants.
Carlos Baberena, Marwin Begaye, Catherine Chauvin, Jill McKeown, Crystal Wagner, Peggy Des Jardines, Danielle Creenaune, Laura Berman, Dani Triay, Maria Pujol, Fawn Atencio, Manuel Guerra, Francesca Lohmann, Agata Michalowska, Hannah Phelps, Soosen Dunholter, Kimberly Anderson Ritchie, Scott Ludwig, Michael Litzau, Melissa Vogley Woods, Terez Iacovino and Laura Bigger
WMN:MKE, Caroline Battle, Dana Lemoine and Rachel Nore
WMN:MKE is a portfolio in which the participants are asked to draw on an experience where a woman in their life has encouraged them to make. Whatever it may be, these prints are homages to important women in our lives who have taught us and supported us in making.
Caroline Battle, Mary Hood, Annie Kielman, Dana Lemoine, Kelda Martensen, Erin Martinez, Jill Marie Mason, Gabriela Munoz, Rachel Nore, Kathryn Polk, Nicole Spranger and Lenore Thomas
Osmosis, Josh Bindewald
This portfolio consists of prints made by members of Highpoint Center for Printmaking’s Artists’ Cooperative, who were invited to explore the idea of osmosis as it refers to the influence (direct and indirect) artists in a print shop have on one another.
Zac Adams-Bliss, Molly Baeverstad, Josh Bindewald, Nancy Bolan, James Boyd Brent, Pam Carberry, Mike Elko, Travis Erickson, Michael Ferut, Don Krumpos, Therese Krupp, Ashlin Mears, Ana Musachio, Nuno Nuñez, Natasha Pestich, Miriam Rudolph, Johanna Winters and Ellen Wold
Material Muse: Japanese Paper Inspiring Print, Sigrid Blohm
The 12 artists included in this portfolio each work differently, but all of them have decided to use Japanese paper because its unique characteristics enhance their own prints in some way. In choosing to print on washi—paper made by many caring hands—each artist’s work becomes a merging of creative processes, those of printmaker and papermaker, and the results are richer for it.
Elizabeth D’Agostino, Brian Curling, Catherine Farish, Karen Kunc, Kristen Martincic, Emma Nishimura, Deb Oden, Loree Ovens, Liz Parkinson, Julia Prime, April Vollmer and Erik Waterkotte
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: Marshall Building, The Fine Art Gallery, Suite 207
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PORTFOLIOS
THEMED
PORTFOLIOS
Homespun Technology, Erik Brunvand
In this portfolio, the artists respond to the theme of “Homespun Technology” in both literal and thematic ways. Some use their own homespun technology in the production of their prints. Others use imagery and thematic content to address this growing trend to “make” on one’s own rather than be content with what someone else makes for you.
Erik Brunvand, Ed Bateman, Sean Caulfield, Catherine Stewart, Ashley John Pigford, Lenore Thomas, Erik Waterkotte, Amber Heaton, Justin Diggle, Nathan Meltz, Ericka Walker, Sandy Brunvand, Mike Lyon, Stefanie Dykes, Nicole Hand, Todd Anderson, Terri Dilling, Koichi Yamamoto, Tricia Treacy, Yoonmi Nam and Leslie Grossman
Digital Luminaries, Deborah Cornell
“Making” in the digital print media shifts between the lighted screen and the printed page. Hovering between pigment and light, the digital print embodies immateriality and a transformation of form; in keeping with the idea of illumination, the works in this portfolio are printed on transparent surfaces. This portfolio highlights print artists for whom digital methods are central to their work and who expand our understanding of these new means for printmaking.
April Katz, Michael Connors, Shaurya Kumar, Beth Grabowski, Edward Berstein, Alicia Candiani, Paul Coldwell, Valgerdur Hauksdottir, Sue Gollifer, Diane Longley, Joshua Brennan, Deborah Cornell, Doug DeVinney and Julian Hensarling
Bankrupt and Empty, Tom Druecker
The portfolio “Bankrupt and Empty” is a response to a handout titled “Bad Boy Art and Artists” written in 2010 by my colleague, Tim High at the University of Texas in Austin. Shortly after the SGCI conference in St Louis it made its way to the internet where it caused quite a stir. This is our response, which includes the original handout and a print by Tim High.
Brett Anderson, Miguel Aragon, Michael Barnes, Byron Brauchli, Robert Brown, Christa Dalien, Tom Druecker, Bill Fick, Jon Goebel, Charles Hancock, John Hancock, Tim High, Peregrine Honig, Tom Huck, Rachel James, Tyler Krasowski, Emmy Lingscheit, Michael Krueger, Greg Nanney, Ryan O’Malley, Matt Rebholz, Artemio Rodriguez, Jenny Schmid, and Tanja Torgerson
Make It Work, Nicole Geary and Nuno Nunez
This portfolio highlights the collaborative, intense, and rewarding nature of being a Frogman’s Printmaking workshop assistant, those creative problem solvers who ensure things happen. Contributing artists have utilized at least one method studied during a Frogman’s workshop, demonstrating a variety of print media and talent.
Nicole Geary, Nuno Nuñez, Lori Ary, Adri Luna, Megan Moore, Matthew Presutti, Blake Sanders, Hannah Sanders, Brett Schiezer, Cat Snapp, Michelle St. Vrain and Richard Wenrich
Upstream/Downstream, Ruthann Godollei
This portfolio reflects the idea that events happening in one place affect things far away—socially, politically, environmentally, esthetically. Participants explored the contagious demand for change, disasters, public policies, compassion, greed, envisioned futures and unforeseen consequences, and have imagined how one situation affects others.
Justin Diggle, Michael Barnes, Fred Hagstrom, Emily Minnie, Melanie Yazzie, Jumana, Al Hashal, Kate Copeland, Tim Dooley, Tattfoo Tan, Mike Ferut, Endi Poskovic, Marwin Begaye, Dusty Herbig, John Hitchcock, Lenore Thomas and Ruthann Godollei
Re:MKE, Jon Gourley
For the past decade, contemporary entertainment has focused much energy into the remake, a retelling of a previously explored narrative. Re:MKE examines this narrative form, the essential components of stories and the editorial hand.
Seul Hwa Eum, Jon Gourley, Dara Lorenzo, Zoe Phillips, Nicholas Price, Julia Sackett, Savanna Snow and Jos Truitt
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
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Cloud Stories, Jana Harper
Cloud Stories is a portfolio of 20 images, bound into a book. Each image tells a different story about clouds and our relationship to the sky.
Gina Alvarez, Lisa Bulawsky, Kristy Cherry , Katie Ford, Helen Frederick, Laura Gunnip, Melissa Harshman, Jana Harper, Despina Meimaroglou, Angela Malchionno, Kelda Martensen, Emily Muschinske, Carinna Parraman, IlaSahai Prouty, Eleanor Ryburn, Gretchen Schermerhorn, Annie Stephens, Amy Thompson, Eileen Wallacem and Kim Wardenburg
Entre Ambos Mundos/Between Both Worlds, Joan Hausrath
Ambos mundos, both worlds. A famous hotel in Cuba where Hemingway wrote For Whom the Bell Tolls. A brand name for cigars, a magazine in Spain, a Bobby Hutcherson CD. But ambos mundos is more than just a historical or brand reference. It is a state, a duality where cultures and ideas cross borders, where visual images open doors that language cannot, and where daily life can enter through those doors.
Linda Soberman, Hugo Anaya, Luis Carlos Rodriguez Ojeda, Mary Lou Lipkin, Humberto Guadalupe Blanco Suaste, Kathleen Cammarata, Glen Rogers, Ernesto de la Peña, Karen von Felten, Marisa Boullosa, Susan Dorf and Joan Hausrath
21 years of Collaboration and Exchange at Artist Proof Studio, Kim Berman and Pamela Allara
The exhibition consists of works by USA Printmakers and collaborators who have collaborated with and taught workshops at Artist Proof Studio as well as printmakers past and present from Artist Proof Studio that span 21 years since the establishment of APS in 1991.
Lauren Adelman; Kim Berman; Birgit Blyth; Muzi Donga; Eileen Foti; Jane Goldman; Phillemon, Hlungwani; Cathy Kernan; Ilana Manolson; Osiah Masekoameng; Lehlohonolo Mashaba, Mongezi Ncaphayi; Lucas Ngweng, Charles Nkosi; Judy Quinn; Rhoda Rosenberg; Peter Scott; Stompie Selibe; Bambo Sibaya, Motsamai Thabane, Bevan de Wet, Nhlanhla Xaba and others.
The Tabloids: A Portfoldio, Adriane Herman
For the occasion of The Tabloids: A Portfoldio, 32 mavens of the multiple will catapult provocative printed matter into the third dimension, as all pieces must incorporate folding in some manner.
Charles Beneke, Laura Berman, Scott Betz, Kate Bingaman-Burt, Michael Connors, Christa Dalien, Stephanie Dotson, Carol Emmons, Jenni Freidman, Leslie Grossman, Ethan Hayes-Chute, Adriane Herman, John Hitchcock, Matthew Hopson-Walker, Claire Joyce, Gary Kachadourian, Chang Soo Kim, Karen Kunc, Ruth Lingen, Beauvais Lyons, Janet Marcavage, Kristen Martincic, Phyllis McGibbon, Pilar Nadal, Yoonmi Nam, Johnny Naugahyde, Deb Oden, Printeresting, Brian Reeves, Carrie Scanga, Jennifer Schmidt, The Little Friends of Printmaking, Klaus Weiss and Karen Havskov Jensen, Paul Windle and Erin Zona
Wonder Women, Amanda Knowles and Lenore Thomas
Wonder Women is a portfolio organized to celebrate and honor Frances Myers as an educator and mentor. The Wonder Women portfolio includes a group of women who were graduate students under Frances Myers through her tenure at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
Jean Dibble, Beth Grabowski, Melissa Harshman, Adriane Herman, Anita Jung, Louise Kames, Amanda Knowles, Janet Marcavage, Phyllis McGibbon, Briony Morrow-Cribbs, Amy Newell, Josie Osbourne, Heather Page, Kristin Rothrock, Meredith Setser and Lenore Thomas
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: Marshall Building, Gallery 218, Suite 218
Location: Woodland Pattern Book Center (Riverwest tour)
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Tech Triple Threat, Lauren Kussro
Print technicians are contributors, innovators, problem solvers and multitaskers in the vast arena of printmaking. In this portfolio, current and former print technicians are brought together to showcase their expertise in a variety of print skills.
Sarah Amos, Jeremy Cody, Lauren Kussro, Mari LaCure, Eric Mathew, Ashley Nason, Laurel Prieto, John Thomas Pusateri, Meredith Setser, Sarah Shebaro, Dan Steeves, Lenore Thomas, Jessie Van Der Laan, Sara-Aimee Verity and Allyce Wood
Unicorn! Emmy Lingscheit and Guen Montgomery
The Unicorn! portfolio examines the fantastical in relation to making. Creation is as much an act of originality as it is genesis through remixture, and the image of the unicorn serves here as a metaphor for innovation and optimistic risk taking in contemporary printmaking, the willingness to investigate unfamiliar territories in the pursuit of something exceptional.
Anna Tararova, Annie Fletcher, Ashton Ludden, Benjamin Brockman, Brandon Gardner, Emmy Lingscheit, Guen Montgomery, Greg Daiker, Hannah and Blake Sanders, Joseph Velasquez, Jason Ammons, Matt Rebholz, Megan Lockhart, Rachel James, Peter Riesing, Richard Wenrich, Rodolfo Salgado Jr., Melanie Yazzie, Ericka Walker, Meghan O’Connor, Lauren Faulkenberry, Ann Flowers, Sara Marie Miller, Johanna Mueller, Katie Ries, Heather Bryant, Carrie Lingscheit, Beauvais Lyons, Leslie Grossman, Veronica Siehl, Mavina Baker, Katherine Pulido, Katie Seals, Steve Miller, Taryn Anne Williams, Rachael Madeline, Jessie Van der Laan and Ruthann Godollei
The Maker’s Mark, Dara Lorenzo
The Maker’s Mark portfolio is about artists collaborating with their everyday external environments. These prints will demonstrate how the artists view their communities and surroundings through the process of mark making using print.
Make __________, Matthew McLaughlin
Make __________ is about the other things we make: as printmakers, artists and people. Whether we make dinner for a family, make peace with an old friend or new enemy or make ends meet in our daily routine, we are constantly making things, even if they’re not prints. Artists will create their pieces based on their own completion of the phrase. A list of suggested phrases will be sent to participating artists for inspiration. Any techniques in printmaking will be allowed, including digital printing.
Matthew McLaughlin, Alessandra Echeverri, Kjellgren Alkire, Caroline Battle, Georgia Deal, Amy Gonzales, Stephanie Hess, Travis Johnson, Elizabeth Klimek, Kathryn Maxwell, Kerry McAleer-Keeler, Jacob Meders, Dennis O’Neil, Gretchen Schermerhorn, Hope Sorenson, Lynette Spencer, Cynthia Tidler and James Tucker
ME/TO/YOU Project, Becca Moore and Danny Greenberg
Participants created relief blocks of the earliest objects they could remember and then left voice messages at the ME/TO/YOU Project’s voicemail, describing their object memory.
Jason Anderson, Siena Baldi, Lauren Banka, Seth Caplan, Kristin Cassidy, Crystal Rosemann, Stan Chisolm, Lindsay Deifik, Julia Denison, Amelia Fawcett, Allegra Fischer, Monica Foote, Jacob Francis, Jenie Gao, Danny Greenberg, Brenda Greenberg, Grace Hong, Hannah Ireland, Sylva Johnson, Rachel Krislov, Anya Liao, Sophie Lipman, Karen Mandelbaum, Chris Mannix, Austin Menard, Erin Mitchell, Becca Moore, Sympho Mubano, Jun Nakamura, Bryan Paine, Jenn Rich, Zoe Scharf, Rachel Sperry, Christine Stavridis, Carly Swindell, Rici Wittkugel, Amanda Yates, Lujia Zhang and Robert Varner
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
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Assorted Delights: A Secured Collection of Print Wonders, Jennifer Scheuer and Hannah Skoonberg
Assorted Delights contains three-dimensional works of a dozen object-oriented artists. The portfolio will be formatted as a candy box with a 3” x 3” x 2” segmented space where their print can exist. Inspired by the wunderkabinett (cabinet of wonders) collections, the box will contain visual and tactile delights. Our portfolio will be open to print and the object as multiple and embrace the individual relationship among artists and how their specific approach to materials informs object making. Assorted Delights will exist both as a fine art object and an alluring handheld discovery.
Samantha Mosby Belcher, Margot Ecke, Ellie Honl, Raluca Iancu, Daniel Ogletree, Jennifer Scheuer, Cat Snapp, Hannah Skoonberg, Camilla Taylor, Rossitza Todorova, Jessie VanderLaan Delaney and Cerese Vaden
Brewers’ Derby, Jeff Sippel
One commonality between the cities of Milwaukee and St. Louis is that they are major beer-brewing capitals of the world. It is in honor of this legacy that the idea for this print exchange was initiated. The final portfolio will present a mixture (or special brew) of contemporary prints created by students and faculty from Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, and University of Missouri in St. Louis.
Jessica Cerutti, Barbara Savan, Casey O’Neal, Patricia Patterson, Valerie Dratwick, Victoria Wayne, Eryn Toebe, Anna Stephens, Ashley Sprecher, Corey Smith, Jay Fox, Joshua Christensen, Emily Klopstein, Ruby Silvestrini, Chadwick Noellert, Philip Gattuso, Seth Kniffin, Stephanie Gage
Critical Mass/Edge, Nathaniel Stern
Critical Mass is a portfolio with 44 international artists, each of them featured in Richard Noyce’s books Printmaking at the Edge and Critical Mass: Printmaking Beyond the Edge. This body of work explores the evolving techniques and approaches, strategies and materials being used in and with contemporary print forms.
Rebecca Beardmore, Scott Betz, Alicia Candiani, Wayne Eastcott, Chiara Giorgetti, Joan Hall, Christina Hallstrom, Anne Heyvaert, Helena Horalkova, Noaji Ishiyama, Brian Jones, Bodo Korsig, Dorothy Krause, Mirta Kupferminic, Leoni Lane, Schneider Michael, Richard Noyce, Michael Reed, Brian Reeves, Lina Rica, Xenofon Sachinis, Ruta Spelskyte, Jelene Sredanovic, Amy Sterly, Patricia Villalobos Echeverria, Michael Wegerer, Klavs Weiss, Pete Williams, Barbara Zeigler, Maria Parolin, John Hitchcock, Adriane Herman, Marjan Eggermont, Liz Ingram, Lisa Bulawsky, Ardan Ozmenoglu, Jessica Meunick-Ganger, Nathaniel Stern, Joscelyn Gardner, Phillip Garrett, Valgerdur Hauksdottir, Sandy Sykes, Kestutis Vasiliunas and Suzuki Michiko
Tony Stoeveken Tribute, Christine Style
Rationale: 2013 is the “Year of the Arts” for UWM, and this tribute portfolio pays well-deserved respect to a printmaker (lithographer) and teacher who made his mark on many others. The UWM alumni Continuum show is part of the “Year of the Arts.” Tony Stoeveken’s emeritus status and alumni connections are important elements deserving of a wider audience. If not for our teachers and those paving the path ahead of us, where would we be?
Christine Style, Stephanie Coupolous-Selle, Mark Wilson, Matt Groshek, Dan Wang, Chris Niver, Susan Bietila, Lisa Englander, Dara Larson, Lee Ann Garrison, April Atkinson, Melanie Ariens, Zoe Darling, Armando Villesenor, Eddie Villenueva, Lynn Calvert, Cece Murphy, Jessica Poor, Paula Schulz and Lois Mogenson
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: Jazz Gallery Center for the Arts (Riverwest tour)
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“The Hidden Room in the House,” Printmakers and the Art of Sublimation, Sylvia Taylor and Kathryn Polk
As artists, we are fortunate to be able to access dormant power and imagery through the process of sublimation. The idea of sublimation serves as a springboard to explore the “fire and black material prima” from which the raw impulses that inform our work are born.
Lynne D. Allen, Emily Arthur, Michael Barnes, Marwin Begaye, Doug Bosley, Alice Leora Briggs, John Driesbach, David DuBose, Oscar Gillespie, Karla Hackenmiller, Nicole Hand, Yuji Hiratsuka, John Hitchcock, Mary Hood, Mark Hosford, Drew Iwaniw, Elizabeth Klimek, Eunkang Koh, Carrie Lingscheit, Teresa Gomez Martorell, Michelle Martin, David Menard, Hibiki Miyazaki, Ashley Nason, Kathryn Polk, Andy Polk, Minna Resnick, Jenny Schmid, Fred Stonehouse, Sylvia Taylor, Susan Weisend and Art Werger
1-2-3-Collaborate! Rossitza Todorova
The 1-2-3-Collaborate! portfolio aims to foster the web of cross-country connections created through printmaking. Three variable portfolios highlight paired collaborations between the 21 artists from around the United States and Canada. By having each artist exchange work with three different collaborators, the portfolio seeks to create new relationships and networks among artists.
Rossitza Todorova, Mackenzy Albright, Caroline Battle, Megan Berner, Melanie Berner, Silas Breaux, Deborah Chaney, Jay Fox, Ellie Honl, Kathryn Hunter, Nicola Lopez, Elysia Michaelsen, M. Gabriela Munoz, Jerry Phillips, Nick Ruth, Brett Schieszer, Kathleen Scott, Shane Smith, Megan Sterling, Patrick Vincent and William P. Dix
Trace + Gestures, Patricia Villalobos Echeverría and Nichole Maury
The theme of this portfolio relates to how traces can effect change, how what imprints us as individuals can effect real changes in culture, politics and our personal lives. What may seem ephemeral, like an echo, can generate cataclysmic changes globally, and what may seem insignificant can alter the course of our personal lives. As printmakers, as artists, what we experience relates to what we make, what we generate becomes. The Trace + Gestures portfolio evidences echoes and fleeting gestures into something that is real and tangible.
Kim Ambriz, Alicia Candiani, Nayda Collazo-Llorens, Jean Dibble, Rodney Ewing, Robert Glasgow, Tom Howes, Cara Jaye, Anita Jung, Kent Kapplinger, Martyna Matusiak, Nichole Maury, Ayanah Moor, Danielle Rante, Miguel Angel Rivera, Claudia Sbrissa, Sergio Soave, Patricia Villalobos Echeverría and Melanie Yazzie
Local Conditions, Jeff Woodbury and Peregrine Press
Peregrine Press, a printmaking collaborative in Portland, Maine, presents the portfolio “Local Conditions,” a suite of 28 prints reflecting on our lives in Maine and how we intertwine and interact with our surroundings, our communities, our situations and each other.
Judith Allen, Susan Amons, Chris Beneman, Mary Brennan, Shawn Brewer, Jessyca Broekman, Sissy Buck, Stephen Burt, Kate Cheney Chappell, Blair Folts, Anne Garland, Jeanne O’Toole Hayman, Alison Hildreth, Elizabeth Jabar, Andrew Jaspersohn, Soozie Large, Mary Lou Lipkin, Robin McCarthy, Larinda Meade, Frankie Odom, Kit Pike, Liz Prescott, Sandra Quinn, Deb Schmitt, Dorothy Schwartz, Phil Stevens, Andrea Van Voorst Van Beest, Sui Witherell and Jeff Woodbury
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: UWM PSOA Kenilworth Square East
Location: Marshall Building, Greymatter Gallery, Suite 222
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Makers in Print
January 18–March 23 Tuesday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
Frederick Layton Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee
The discipline of printmaking is as diverse in its execution as the artists from the many countries around the world where it is a visual art practice. Ranging from centuries-old traditional techniques to new digital media, the artists in MIAD’s international Makers in Print exhibition embody this diversity of approaches.
The Makers in Print exhibition is staged in collaboration with the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Inova art gallery. They are showing the works of artists from Mexico, South Africa and Korea. MIAD is exhibiting artists from the following countries:
Artists from Poland: Grzegorz Handerek, Cieslinska Agnieszka, Mateusz Dabrowski, Krzysztof Symanowicz and Andrzej Weclawski.
Artists from China: Zhiyuan Cong, Long Chen, Qi Chen, Daquan Dai, Jun Guang, Dongxia Li, Guirong Lou, Yue Yang and Yuanfan Zhang.
Artists from Argentina: Silvana Blasbalg, Andrea Moccio, Silvana Paulon, Roberto Koch, Mirta Kupferminc and Zulema Maza.
Also on exhibit in the Frederick Layton Gallery:
Judith Solodkin and Margo Humphrey
Margo Humphrey is an accomplished and renowned printmaker whose work spans five decades of artistic production. Her works often present an insightful commentary on the African American relationship to mainstream American culture.
An accomplished printmaker herself, Judith Solodkin is best known for her work operating a fine art press, SOLO Impression. In her awards exhibit, Judith will show work from numerous artists she has worked with over her years at SOLO Impression, including such artists as Louise Bourgeois, Lynda Benglis, R. M. Fisher and Kent Hendrickson.
Stacey Steinberg
Lesley Dill
Making Connections: A Juried Exhibition of MIAD Printmaking Alumni
February 26–March 23 Tuesday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
Brooks Stevens Gallery, River Level, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee
Since the college’s founding in 1974, MIAD has had an ongoing printmaking major that has evolved into one of the best print programs and production facilities in the Midwest. The alumni selected for this exhibit represent many different generations of students in the program who have studied under a variety of faculty members over the years. Also on exhibit will be works from the full-time faculty members who have guided the program and influenced the many students who have participated in it over the years of its existence.
I Had a Blueprint of History: An Artist Book by Lesley Dill
March 18–March 23 Tuesday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
River Level Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee
Artist, Lesley Dill; poet, Tom Sleigh; papermaker, Paul Wong; printer, Peter Kruty; and publisher, Susan Gosin collaborated for five years to produce a limited-edition book in which the “whole is greater than the sum of its parts.” Beginning with the search for the perfect text, the collaboration became a performance of peers as each contributor responded with distinctive ideas and skills to realize the artist’s concept. Dill worked directly with a master papermaker and printer to translate her 40 masterful images into an editioned book that retains the raw power of her original imagery as it gained in subtlety from the nuances of each process.
Zhiyuan Cong
Whitfield Lovell, Barbados, inkjet print on front and verso with hand-printed lithograph on stone, 2009
Margo Humphrey
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Arts Colony or Global Village? Teaching printmaking in the interdisciplinary environment
February 26–March 23 Tuesday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
Entrance Gallery, MIAD
This exhibition is an attempt to reexamine some fundamental tenets of traditional print processes. Its starting point is a critical essay by Luis Camnitzer about the insular nature of printmaking practices, titled “Printmaking: A Colony of the Arts.” The work was done by printmaking students from the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design and the Warsaw Academy of Fine Arts. All artists vigorously engaged in the search for what we dubbed the “essence of print process.” We allowed all concepts to be examined and went as far as to question the validity of the traditional printmaking process in the era of digital technology. We all agreed that we would use print media only when they were the best process to express or convey the artist’s process. If they indeed were prints or included printed matter, it happens through a process of thorough examination, argument and critical discussions, that all took into account a broad context of contemporary print media art.
Instructors: Waldek Dynerman and Shane Walsh
Participants: MIAD: Brittany Diamond, Cara Corder, Andrea Dolter, Tess Doyle, Lucas Ruminski and Anna Stephens
Warsaw Fine Arts Academy: Ewa Budka (at MIAD as exchange student), Joanna Gebal and Agnieszka Kosiec
Three Bridges
March 20–23 Tuesday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
East Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee
Participants: 36 participants from the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Ohio University and Northern Illinois University
Three Bridges is a collaborative installation by more than 30 students and faculty from Ohio University, Northern Illinois University and the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. The concept of three bridges references the Milwaukee Bridge War of 1845 between early settlers of the city. By creating a printed city at 1:50 scale, the project allows the participants to create three sections of an ideal city linked by bridges. This city is an ideal place for printmakers, where advertisements for ink and press manufacturers appear on billboards and the sides of buildings.
The Printed Object
March 16–24 Tuesday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
Wallway Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee
A presentation of work that uses digital processes to create printed objects. Participants include Will Pergl, Brent Budsberg, Shana McCaw, Brian Nigus and more.
Three Bridges
Brian Nigus
Lucas Ruminski, Head on Squiggle Form, Ink and Graphite on Paper 50” x 38”
EXHIBITIONS (Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design)
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2012 Student Fellowship Award Recipient Exhibitions
March 20–23 Tuesday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
East Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee
Graduate Award: Aaron S. Coleman
Aaron S. Coleman is an artist and printmaker living in Dekalb, Illinois. He will receive his Master of Fine Arts degree from Northern Illinois University in the spring of 2013. Aaron is a mixed media printmaker utilizing mezzotint, lithography, intaglio, relief and serigraphy to create works focused on political and social commentary. He combines imagery from comic books and stained glass windows to raise questions concerning misconstrued belief systems and twisted moral values in our society. Aaron stays in tune with the printmaking community, organizing portfolio exchanges and exhibiting both nationally and internationally. In 2012 he organized an international mezzotint exchange titled “Both Sides Of The Brain” which hosted 17 artists from 6 different countries. The portfolio was exhibited across the U.S. at several universities and galleries including the Washington Printmakers Gallery. He has exhibited at the Liu Haisu Art Museum in Shanghai, China and was invited to participate in the 6th and 7th International Printmaking Biennial of Douro in Alijo,Portugal. Aaron’s work can be found in the collections of The University of Colorado,Wichita State University and the Ino-cho Paper Museum in Kochi, Japan.
2012 Student Fellowship Award Recipient Exhibitions
March 20–23 Tuesday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
East Gallery, 273 E. Erie St., Milwaukee
Undergraduate Award: Ryan Kangail
Originally introduced to printmaking mediums in 2007 during his enrollment at Elgin Community College, Ryan Kangail continued to pursue his interest in printmaking and later earned his Bachelors of Fine Arts Degree in Printmaking from Northern Illinois University. Kangail has shown work nationally in the Sky Rabbit Print National 2 juried exhibition, and has received numerous awards, most notably the 2012 SGC International Undergraduate Student Fellowship and the 2011 Northern Illinois University Sjoholm Fine Arts Scholarship. He has had works published by Canon Ball Press, Brooklyn, NY, and collected by the University of Colorado Printmaking Department Archives, Boulder, CO. His most recent body of work, Lost Faces, observes discomfort found in familiar settings. Eager to explore the unfamiliar, Kangail changed his place of residence in late 2012. Currently, he is actively seeking printmaking studio opportunities in Tempe, AZ, and plans to pursue graduate school in Fall 2014.
Ryan Kangail
Aaron S. Coleman
EXHIBITIONS (Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design)
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21 Years of Collaboration and Exchange at Artist Proof Studio
March 20–March 23
Kenilworth Square East Galleries
Collaboration and Exchange at Artist Proof Studio reveals personal exploration, a process for uncovering one’s visual voice, communal environments where making invites collaboration, and the power of print giving voice to people facing economic, political and environmental challenges. The exhibition celebrates international printmakers who contribute as makers through print and who have made a difference in building and supporting careers of many young South African artists.
The exhibition, coordinated by Pamela Allara and Kim Berman, consists of works by printmakers and collaborators from the United States who have collaborated with and taught workshops at Artist Proof Studio, as well as printmakers past and present from Artist Proof Studio who cover a span of 21 years since the establishment of APS in 1991: Lauren Adelman, Kim Berman, Birgit Blyth, Muzi Donga, Eileen Foti, Jane Goldman, Phillemon Hlungwani, Cathy Kernan, Ilana Manolson, Osiah Masekoameng, Lehlohonolo Mashaba, Mongezi Ncaphayi, Lucas Ngweng, Charles Nkosi, Judy Quinn, Rhoda Rosenberg, Peter Scott, Stompie Selibe, Bambo Sibaya, Motsamai Thabane, Bevan de Wet, Nhlanhla Xaba and others.
Another Place: Printmakers’ and Book Artists’ Perspectives on Travel and Place
March 1–June 28 Gallery hours: Monday-Friday, 7:30am – 5:00pm, or by appointment
UWM Golda Meir Library, 4th Floor Exhibition Gallery 2311 E. Hartford Ave., Milwaukee
Drawn entirely from the Book Arts Collection in the UWM Libraries’ Special Collections, materials on display include works by noted American printmakers and book artists, such as Sarah Bryant, Bob Erickson, Fred Hagstrom, Jim Lee, Clifton Meador, Gaylord Schanilec, Clarissa Sligh, Bonnie Stahlecker, Barbara Tettenbaum, and international artists, such as David Esslemont (Wales), Néstor Goyanes (Argentina), Mirta Kupferminc (Argentina), Louse Levergneux (Canada), Xavier Monsalvatje (Spain), and Keith Wilson (Ireland).
Makers in Print
January 18–March 24 Wednesday, Noon–5:00 p.m.; Thursday, Noon–8:00 p.m.; Friday–Sunday, Noon–5:00 p.m.
Institute of Visual Arts (Inova), 2155 N. Prospect Ave., Milwaukee
Inova’s Makers in Print features the work of artists from South Africa, South Korea and Mexico. Coordinating curators from these countries have selected artists whose work demonstrates a range of innovative techniques and meaningful approaches to this time-honored genre. Exhibiting artists from South Africa: Paul Edmunds, Paul Emmanuel, William Kentridge, David Koloane, Terry Kurgan and Chloe Reid. From South Korea: Sanggon Chung, Young-Hun Kim, Oh Shin Kwon, Shin Sujin and Sang-Mi Yoo. From Mexico, portfolios from three print workshops—Escuela de Cultura Popular Martires del 68, Máquina Binaria Ediciones and Artistas Veracruzanos Bajo la Ceiba—will be exhibited. MIAD’s Layton Gallery has a partner exhibition of works by artists from Argentina, China and Poland.
The awards exhibition celebrates the careers of Lesley Dill (New York, NY), Frances Myers (University of Wisconsin, Madison, Department of Art) and Alison Saar (Los Angeles, CA). Each artist will be represented by a concise overview of recent print works.
Also on view at Inova:
Lifetime Achievements in Printmaking Award Exhibition: Lesley Dill
Excellence in Teaching Printmaking Award Exhibition: Frances Myers
Keynote Speaker Exhibition: Alison Saar
Three solo exhibitions celebrate the careers of Lesley Dill (New York, NY), Frances Myers (University of Wisconsin-Madison, Department of Art) and Alison Saar (Los Angeles, CA). Each artist will be represented by a concise overview of recent print works.
Sanggon Chung
Lesley Dill
Frances Myers
Alison Saar
Kim Berman
Keith Wilson
EXHIBITIONS (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee)
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Dürer to Dine: 500 Years of Printmaking
March 7–March 28 Monday–Thursday, 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m., Friday–Sunday, closed
UWM Art History Gallery, Mitchell Hall, Room 154, 3203 N. Downer Ave., Milwaukee
ORGANIZER: THE UWM ART HISTORY GALLERY
Since the 15th century, when Albrecht Dürer created masterful wood-block prints and engravings, printmaking techniques have evolved to include etching, mezzotint, lithography, silkscreen and monoprint. Highlighting these developments, this exhibition includes prints by seminal artists such as Dürer, Rembrandt, Piranesi, Whistler, Picasso, Johns, Dine and others.
Uprisings: Images of Labor
March 21–March 2Opening Reception: March 21, 5:00–8:00 p.m.Closing Reception: March 28, 5:00–7:00 p.m.Artist talks: March 22–23, 9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
UWM Union Art Gallery, 2200 E. Kenwood, Milwaukee
Uprisings: Images of Labor is a collaborative and interactive printmaking exhibition based on themes of labor, brought to the Union Art Gallery by the committed artists of the Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative. The exhibit features an interactive print factory and a fascinating, two-day series of artist lectures in conjunction with the Southern Graphics Council International Printmaking Conference, taking place throughout Milwaukee March 20–23.
Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative is a decentralized network of 24 artists committed to making print and design work that reflects a radical social, environmental and political stance. Visitors of Uprisings can expect print editions based on the theme of labor to hang from the sky, as individual and collaborative work occurs on the ground. Justseeds artists, the Combat Paper Project and guest artists will be included in the exhibition as well as in the two-day schedule of artists’ talks about art and activism. All talks are free and open to the public.
www.justseeds.org
Albrecht Dürer
Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative
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MA/MFA Exhibition I
March 8 - March 30, 2013UWM Arts Center Building (second floor)
This exhibition will showcase the work of Peck School of the Arts graduate students; Jay Fox, Joe Grennier, Brooklyn Henke, Chantalla Kommanivanh, and Amy Magnuson.
Jay Fox
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Bay View, Walker’s Point
A Marvelous Bash: Linocuts and Letterpress Prints from Team Nerd Press
Grove Galleries 830 S. Fifth St., Milwaukee 414-520-3891
March 22–23, by appointment only Tour: March 23, 9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
Appearing all under one roof: linocut, wood-block and letterpress prints from N. Adam Beadel, aka Team Nerd Press; the best prints from his type-based printmaking students at MIAD; speculative prints by The Drypoints; all manner of affordable letterpress swag; and introducing two new literary series of posters.
Winter Garden
Jenie Gao Studio and Gallery 2375 S. Howell Ave., Milwaukee Jenie.org, here@genie.org
March 23–31, by appointment only Tour: March 23, 9:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
The grass is greener on the other side because there’s more bullsh** over there. It’s greener because it hasn’t snowed yet, because the seasons haven’t changed yet, because the seasons may never change over there, and when they do, no one will know what to do. This is a show of all-weather people, of being consistent in who we are regardless of the circumstances. The show will feature the print artwork of several artists, live printing and a special surprise for attendees.
Raoul Deal
Little Friends of Printmaking
Ni De Aquí Ni De Allá [From Neither Here nor There] by Raoul Deal
Latino Arts, Inc., Auditorium and Gallery 1028 S. 9th St., Milwaukee 414-384-3100 http://www.latinoartsinc.org/Exhibits.htm
March 15–June 7 Monday–Friday, 9:00 a.m.–8:00 p.m. Tour: March 23, 9:00 a.m.–2:30 p.m.
Educator and artist Raoul Deal has explored the development of cultural identity among immigrants who moved to Milwaukee from Mexico. Ni De Aquí Ni De Allá is a collection of large woodcut prints interpreting oral histories Deal has collected from the local immigrant community in the past few years.
Little Friends of Printmaking: A Selection of New Prints and Objects
Sky High Gallery 2501 S. Howell Ave, Milwaukee www.skyhighmilwaukee.com
March 15–April 14 Monday–Friday, Noon–7:00 p.m., Saturday, 11:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m., Sunday, Noon–5:00 p.m., closed Tuesdays Tour: March 23, 9:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
Husband-and-wife team JW and Melissa Buchanan first made a name for themselves by designing and printing silkscreened concert posters but soon branched out into further fields, designing fancy junk for whoever would pay them money. In addition to their work as illustrators and designers, they continue their fine art pursuits through exhibitions, lectures and residencies, spreading the gospel of silkscreen to anyone inclined to listen. Their awards include honors from the Art Directors Club, American Illustration and Communication Arts, and their work has been featured in books including New Masters of Poster Design [Rockport] and Handmade Nation [Princeton Architectural Press].
Adam Beadel
Jenie Gao
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Riverwest
MilwauKEY
Imagination Giants 901 E. Wright St., Milwaukee imaginationgiants.tumblr.com
March 21–22Reception: March 21, 7:30–10:00 p.m.
MilwauKEY provides insight into a plethora of printmaking processes by displaying the actual matrices used to create the trap, or “key,” layers. Relief blocks, intaglio and litho plates, as well as screens and mylars from some of your favorite print artists, will be hung from and piled on every available surface in a clustered salon format to celebrate the all-important layer and the joy of creation!
Exhibition includes: Matt Hopson-Walker, Meghan O’Connor, Tom Christison, John Hitchcock, Nancy Palmeri, Brandon Sanderson, The Amazing Hancock Brothers, Kathryn Polk, Jim Bryant, Nicole Hand-Bryant, Ryan O’Malley, Katie Seals, Mark Hosford, Hannah March Sanders, Matthew Egan and Blake Sanders.
Tony Stoeveken Tribute Portfolio Exchange, Master Lithographer and Mark Maker
Jazz Gallery Center for the Arts 926 E. Center St., Milwaukee
March 20–23 Tuesday, 6:00–8:00 p.m., Saturday, Noon–5:00 p.m. Reception: March 21, 7:30 p.m.–10:00 p.m.
For UWM, 2012-13 is the “Year of the Arts,” and this tribute portfolio pays well-deserved respect to a printmaker (lithographer) and teacher who made his mark on many others. The UWM alumni Continuum show is part of the “Year of the Arts.” Tony Stoeveken’s emeritus status and alumni connections are important elements deserving of a wider audience. If not for our teachers and those paving the path ahead of us, where would we be?
Collective (Print) Action: Political Print Portfolios by Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative
Sweet Water Organic 2151 S. Robinson Ave., Milwaukee 414-489-0425, http://sweetwater-organic.com http://www.justseeds.org/
March 23–April 23 Monday-Friday, 8:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.Tour: March 23, 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.Reception: March 23, 5:00–8:00 p.m.
Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative presents an exhibition on political print portfolios. Stop by ReciproCity (an experimental art space housed inside an indoor urban aquaponics farm) and see four portfolio projects that Justseeds has co-organized, plus the international renowned Sweet Water urban farm.
La Ceiba Gráfica
Walker’s Point Center for the Arts 839 S. 5th St., Milwaukee 414-672-2787 x10, www.wpca-milwaukee.org
February 1–April 6 Tuesday–Saturday, Noon–5:00 p.m. Tour: March 23, 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
La Ceiba Gráfica is a printmaking workshop in Veracruz, Mexico, founded in 2005 to encourage the creation of art and contribute to helping the public gain access to the arts and art making regardless of an individual’s economic situation in that region of Mexico. This exhibition will include 40 lithographs produced at La Ceiba Gráfica and will be curated by the organization’s founding members: Per Anderson, Martin Vinaver and Rafael Ruiz and will coincide with the Southern Graphics Council Conference—the largest printmakers association in North America—expecting to bring up to 2,000 delegates from all 50 states to Milwaukee.
Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative
Walker’s Point Center for the Arts
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Third Ward, Downtown, East Side
Michael Kutzer: Etchings and Woodcuts
Charles Allis Art Museum 1801 N. Prospect Ave., Milwaukee 414-278-8295, www.charlesallis.org
March 20–May 12Wednesday–Sunday, 1–5 p.m.Reception: March 22, 5:00 p.m.–9:00 p.m.Artist Talk: March 22, 6:30 p.m.
The Charles Allis Art Museum presents Michael Kutzer: Etchings and Woodcuts. This solo exhibition featuring prints by the German-born artist Michael Kutzer will showcase his talent and ability to create prints that are both thought provoking and visually captivating. Kutzer, inspired by the beauty of the lakeshore, creates prints that represent Lake Michigan and its surrounding forests. Consisting of etchings from his series Views of the Lakeshore, The Invisible Animals of Seminary Woods, and Anholt Landscapes, this retrospective exhibition will display many of his charming landscapes and imaginative creatures. Also included are etchings and woodcuts from his Punch Theater series, depicting the famous puppet Punch, who is well known for his cruel and rebellious ways. Michael Kutzer: Etchings and Woodcuts demonstrates Kutzer’s remarkable ability to create narrative prints that are truly romantic and absorbing.
Fresh Hot Press: UWM Printmaking Grads
239 E. Chicago St., 1st Floor, Cityside Plaza Bldg.
March 20–22 Monday–Friday, 10:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m., Saturday–Sunday, ClosedReception: March 22, 5:00–8:00 p.m.
Fresh Hot Press is a student-run organization at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. We produce editions of fine prints with visiting artists, exhibit our respective artwork in group shows, and do printmaking demonstrations and other events throughout the community and beyond. Recent editions include Fred Stonehouse, Kathyrn Polk, Sean Starwars, Dennis Mcnett, Chris Dacre and Tom Huck.
Gaylord Schanilec: Wood Engraver and Fine Printer
Woodland Pattern Book Center 720 E. Locust St., Milwaukee 414-263-5001, woodlandpattern.org
March 21–23 Tuesday–Friday, 11:00 a.m.–8:00 p.m., Saturday–Sunday, Noon-5:00 p.m., Closed MondaysReception: March 21, 7:30–10:00 p.m.
Internationally recognized book artist and fine printer Gaylord Schanilec is a master of the art of wood engraving. His current project, The River, is a study of the 22-mile length of the upper Mississippi River, known as Lake Pepin, or Pool Number 4 by the Army Corps of Engineers.
“This widest naturally occurring part of the river was dubbed the ‘Lake of Tears’ by Louis Hennepin in 1680, inspired by the tears of Indian men whose desire to kill the Frenchman was frustrated by their chief. The lake is home to a broad diversity of life including, I have read, nearly 80 species of catchable fish. Mayflies of the Driftless Region (MPS 2005) established a direction in my work that my wife calls ‘playful’ science. For a mayfly to be included in the book, I had to catch one. Sylvæ (MPS 2007), a study of the trees in our 20-acre Wisconsin wood, continues in the direction of natural science and adds the dimension of human history. This river, it seems to me, is the ultimate territory. I view myself as something of a modern-day natural philosopher swimming in the wake of Darwin or Thoreau. Of course, there are no new species to be discovered, and I am no Henry David Thoreau, but for me this place, at this time, is as interesting as can be.”—GS
The Tabloids
Reception: March 21, 7:30–10:00 p.m.
The Tabloids (A Portfoldio) explores and emphasizes the mechanics of making by referencing format in its title and by requiring that contributions extend beyond the dimensions of the container. These works will be outside the box, so to speak, with the stipulation that it also embodies the capacity to rest comfortably in the box. Viewers are invited to page through, unfold and otherwise open/dismantle these multidimensional works, while bearing responsibility to figure out how to put the works back together again.
Also at Woodland Pattern Book Center:
Michael Kutzer
Galen Gibson Cornell
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Gallery Artists
Gallery 218, Marshall Building 207 E. Buffalo St., Suite 218, Milwaukee http://www.gallery218.com/
March 21–29 Reception: March 22, 5:00 p.m.–9:00 p.m.
Gallery 218 is a 23 cooperative gallery in Milwaukee. Member artists operate the gallery and show their work on an ongoing basis. Exhibits change every six to eight weeks. Its focus is on abstract, modern, minimalist, conceptual or experimental works in all media.
Exhibition includes Judith Hooks, Bernie Newman, Kathryn Kmet, Josh Hintz, Sam Lux and Mike Smit.
Wonder Women
Gallery 218, Marshall Building 207 E. Buffalo St., Suite 218, Milwaukee http://www.gallery218.com/
March 20–23 Reception: March 22, 5:00 p.m.–9:00 p.m.
Wonder Women is a portfolio organized to celebrate and honor Frances Myers as an educator and mentor. This is the second all-female portfolio Amanda Knowles and Lenore Thomas have organized. For this second incarnation, we have included only women who attended the University of Wisconsin, Madison as graduate students under Frances. While we cannot possibly include all the women Frances has influenced over the years, we have chosen a group that extends over the breadth of time Frances taught. She has inspired so many students to be makers over her tenure as a professor at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Since this year’s conference is about the idea of us as makers, honoring Frances as a mentor and teacher who encouraged her students to innovate, experiment and collaborate is only fitting.
Pushing It: Works by Printmakers with an Innovative Approach
Dean Jensen Gallery 759 N. Water St., Milwaukee 414-278-7100, deanjensengallery.com
March 8–April 13 Tuesday–Friday, 10:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m., Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.Reception: March 22, 5:00–8:00 p.m.
Exhibition includes a host of Tandem Press–affiliated artists, along with works by Tyanna J. Buie, Jack Damer and Lucas Ruminski. From hand-cut and reassembled prints to decollage, chine’ colle and direct appliqué of ink and other materials, these artists push beyond the boundaries of printmaking with their fearless approach and use of materials and methods.
Society of American Graphic Artists 80th Members Exhibit
Delind Gallery of Fine Art 450 E. Mason St., Milwaukee 414-271-8525, www.delindgallery.com
March 20–April 14 Monday–Friday, 10:00 a.m.–5:30 p.m., Saturday, 10:30 a.m.–4:00 p.m. Reception: March 22, 5:00–8:30 p.m., featuring Wisconsin cheeses, sausages, beer and wine
The Society of American Graphic Artists is the oldest print organization in the country and will be celebrating its 100th anniversary in 2015. Membership over the years has included the who’s who of American printmaking and continues that same caliber of outstanding membership today.
More than 100 fine arts prints in various graphic media, representing nationally and internationally recognized artists from across the nation will be represented. There will be a special invitational group showcasing members who have attained prominence in the printmaking field over the years. There will also be the unveiling of the “Wisconsin Suite,” produced by six Wisconsin artist/printmakers who are SAGA members in a welcoming recognition of our SGCI Conference guests.
Tyanna J. Buie, Jack Damer, Lucas Ruminski and Tandem Press Artists
Ronald L. Ruble
Josh Hintz
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Read Between the Lines: Enrique Chagoya’s Codex Prints
Haggerty Museum of Art at Marquette University 13th and Clybourn, Milwaukee 414-288-1669, marquette.edu/haggerty
January 16–May 19 Monday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–4:30 p.m., Thursday, 10:00 a.m.–8:00 p.m., Sunday, Noon–5:00 p.m.
Tour: March 23, 10:00 a.m.–2:30 p.m.Gallery talk with curator Emilia Layden: March 23, 1:00 p.m.
Read Between the Lines: Enrique Chagoya’s Codex Prints comprises editioned, accordion-folded artist books and the preparatory drawings and trial proofs created during their fabrication. The exhibition seeks to reveal how and why the codex format, made of amate, or bark, paper and read from right to left based on Ancient Aztec, Mayan and Mixtec precedents, is a particularly successful artistic device for Enrique Chagoya.
The complexity of the codex printing process echoes the difficulty of the subject matter depicted therein. Content varies and can simultaneously include satirical, multilingual visual references to contemporary and historical political discourse, ancient pre-Columbian iconography, American pop culture, and international art historical paradigms.
While ancient codices were designed as narrative documents, Chagoya eschews the strict linearity of the form, instead conflating diverse images to create intricate, richly layered objects that defy conclusive interpretation. The codex serves as the most effective medium for the artist’s practice of “reverse anthropology,” which questions the power structures that create dominant, normative cultures and seeks to address the complexity of cross-cultural identity.
Bob Erickson: Seana Thir, Recent Works on Paper
Grava Gallery 207 E. Buffalo St., Suite 130, Milwaukee 414-277-8228
March 16–April 28 Tuesday–Friday, 10:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m., Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. Reception: March 22, 5:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m.
The works on paper in this exhibition explore the north Atlantic coastal environment of County Mayo, Ireland—“Old land” (Seana Thir in Irish) shaped by wind, water and time.
Natural Forces: The Combination of Human Form and Nature
Elaine Erickson Gallery 207 E. Buffalo St., Milwaukee 414-221-0613, www.eericksongallery.com
March 20–April 30 Tuesday–Friday, 11:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Saturday, 11:00– 4:00 p.m.Reception: March 22, 5:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m.
Works by Valerie Hammond, Rina Yoon, Mary Hood and Ludmilla Armata.
Trace and Gestures
Greymatter Gallery 207 E. Buffalo St., Suite 222, Milwaukee http://www.greymattergallery.com/
March 20–23 Saturday, Noon–4:00 p.m. and by appointment Reception: March 22, 5:00 p.m.–9:00 p.m.
The theme of this portfolio relates to how traces can effect change, how what imprints us as individuals can effect real changes in culture, politics and our personal lives. What may seem ephemeral, like an echo, can generate cataclysmic changes globally, and what may seem insignificant can alter the course of our personal lives.
Seana Thir
Rina Yoon
Enrique Chagoya
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William Kentridge’s Nose Series, Works by William Kentridge
Milwaukee Art Museum 700 N. Art Museum Dr., Milwaukee 414-224-3200, mam.org
February 26–June 16Tuesday–Sunday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Thursday, 8:00 p.m., Closed Monday Reception: March 22, 5:00–11:00 p.m.
Lesley Dill and the Landfall Press Archive
Lesley Dill is one of many artists featured in the Landfall Press Archive, housed at the Milwaukee Art Museum. Landfall Press was established in Chicago in 1970 by master printer Jack Lemon and is now located in Santa Fe. The museum holds more than 150 objects related to Dill’s printmaking process including drawings, exercises on mylar, notations and photocopied trials, printing plates and various stages of printed works. The two works and corresponding preparatory materials featured in this display illustrate Dill’s exploration into the human form and language. Of special interest is Poem Dress “The Soul Selects Her Own Society,” which cites the 1890 poem by Emily Dickinson.
Greatest Hits: Selections of Printmaking Process from the 16th Century to Today
Exhibition includes Jacques Callot, Albrecht Dürer, Francisco de Goya, Giovanni Battista Piranesi and others.
CCBrick Prints
Hot Pop 213 N. Broadway, Milwaukee
March 22 Tuesday–Saturday, 11:00 a.m.–7:00 p.m., Sunday, Noon–5:00 p.m.Reception: March 22, 1:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m.
Brick Prints is an interactive exhibit exploring the sculptural and printing potential of Milwaukee’s “Cream City” brick. With engraved bricks, the public is invited to pull prints featuring various images and text representing Milwaukee.
Collotypes of Gustav Klimt, Malcolm T. Liepke Lithographs
Katie Gingrass Gallery 241 N. Broadway, Milwaukee 414-289-0855, www.gingrassgallery.com
March 21–April 1 Monday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–6:00 p.m., Sunday, Noon–4:00 p.m. Reception: March 22, 5:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m.
This exhibition features a series of collotypes depicting Gustav Klimt’s most significant paintings between the years of 1898 and 1913. Klimt administered the printing project himself and created a unique gold ink seal for each image produced.
Malcolm T. Liepke
Also at the Milwaukee Art Museum:
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New Work by Shana McCaw and Brent Budsberg
Portrait Society Gallery 207 E. Buffalo St., Milwaukee 414-879-9930, Portraitsocietygallery.com
March 15–May 10 Thursday–Saturday, Noon–5:00 p.m. Reception: March 22, 5:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m.
This collaborative team presents new bodies of work from two recent residencies in Utah and Death Valley. The exhibition will include photographs documenting their fictitious roles as pilgrims as well as videos and a sculptural installation.
A Print Collaboration: White Noise
White Noise is a collaboration among four printmakers, creating a body of work in response to Giese’s chapel. This is the first time Makeal Flammini, Alyssa Schulte, Jessica Seamans and Ella Dwyer have worked together on a project. They will employ a variety of print techniques and will also collaborate on hand-painted plates.
Kevin Giese: Winter Chapel
Each year, Portrait Society invites a different artist to build a chapel/meditation space dedicated to our harsh winter clime. Kevin Giese chapel features a stand of hollow birch trees with their seams hand stitched together in an act of tender repair.
Forum
Milwaukee County Historical Society 910 N. Old World Third St., Milwaukee milwaukeehistory.net, veteranprintproject.com
March 22–May 31 Monday–Saturday, 9:30 a.m.–5:00 p.m.,Sunday, ClosedTour: March 23, 10:00 a.m.–2:30 p.m.
Veteran Print Project pairs print makers with veterans and encourages them to have a discussion about the veterans’ military experience. Together, with the Wisconsin American GI Forum (WI-AGIF), a Latino veteran group based in Milwaukee, artists from around the country will visually interpret this dialogue.
Veteran Print Project seeks to bring two divergent groups, veterans and artists, together to express the historical experiences of a new generation of veterans through the traditional methods of fine art print, opening an ongoing dialogue between these two groups.
Top Drawer Prints-Curator: Warrington Colescott & Top Drawer Small Prints-Curator: Cheryl Olson-Sklar, Print Inventory And SGCI Recent & Current Award Recipients
Peltz Gallery 1119 E. Knapp St., Milwaukee 414-223-4278, artnet.com/gallery/851/peltz-gallery.html
January 19–March 23 Tuesday–Saturday, 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. or by appointment Reception: March 22, 6:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m.
Exhibitions include:David Becker, Warrington Colescott, Jack Damer, Ray Gloeckler, Dean Meeker, Frances Myers, Ron Ruble, Alfred Sessler, Claire Van Vliet, Bill Weege, John Wilde, Marna Brauner, Tyanna Buie, Steve Campbell, Kate Clapper, Allison B. Cooke, Lesley Dill, Sally Duback, Waldek Dynerman, Robert Erickson, Audrey Niffenegger, Jessica Mueninck-Ganger, John Gruenwald, Martha Hayden, Yoko Hattori, Anna Hepler, John Himmelfarb, Tom Huck, Teresa James, David Jones, Diane Levesque, Josie Osborne, Cheryl Olson-Sklar, Nathaniel Stern, Fred Stonehouse, Christine Style, Lenore Thomas, Rina Yoon and many others.
Yvette M. Pino
Fred Stonehouse
Shana McCaw and Brent Budsberg
Also at the Portrait Society Gallery:
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Material Muse: Japanese Paper Inspiring Print
Safi Studios Marshall Bldg, 207 E. Buffalo St., Suite LL8, Milwaukee http://www.safistudiosart.com
March 20–23 Friday, 5:00–9:00 p.m. and by appointment Reception: March 22, 5:00–9:00 p.m.
Before ever putting ink to paper, printmakers must go through many steps when using their hands to prepare the images they’ll make. When those same artists choose to print on washi,* the paper they use has had a similar journey. From crop cultivation and harvest to fiber preparation and sheet forming, skilled hands have carried out each step: many pairs of hands to get a sheet of washi into the hands of an artist. The artists included in this portfolio all work differently. But all have responded to and used some characteristic of washi, characteristics made possible by the many caring hands that make it. In choosing to work on washi, an artist’s print becomes a merging of two creative processes: collaboration between printmaker and papermaker.
Roger L. Steele: 1945–2012
The Fine Art GalleryMarshall Bldg, 207 E. Buffalo St., Suite 210, Milwaukee414-688-2787, thefineartgallery.org
March 22–April 13 Friday, 11:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Saturday, 11:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m. and by appointment Reception: March 22, 5:00–9:30 p.m.
Roger Steele, 1945–2012, was a significant contributor to the development of the Southern Graphics Council International. His service to SGCI spanned nearly 40 years, and he served in almost every position on the board. In addition, Roger was an esteemed educator at the University of South Carolina Beaufort’s Art Department. With 37 years of service to the university, he helped lay the foundation for today’s Studio Arts program. Printmaking was his passion, and his skill and enthusiasm inspired generations of students to strive to emulate his considerable artistic achievements. Roger’s works have been included in several notable exhibitions and selected for the collections of major museums including the Library of Congress and the Corcoran.
Sustenance: Progressive Printmaking Now
Redline Milwaukee 1422 N. 4th St., Milwaukee 414-491-9088, http://www.redlineartmke.org/
March 7–April 13 Thursday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–3:00 p.m.Tour: March 23, 10:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.Opening Reception: March 23, 6:00–9:00 p.m.
Exhibition includes: Kerri Cushman, Waldek Dynerman, Melissa Gill, John Hitchcock, Mary Hood, Ina Kaur, Monika Meler, Jessica Meuninck-Ganger, Phyllis McGibbon, Kristina Paabus, Ryan Parker, Kathryn Reeves, Meredith Setser, Megan St. Clair, Fahimeh Vadhat and Rina Yoon.
Pabst Blue Ribbon, a Milwaukee Icon: Works by Jesse Bernhardt
Rogues Gallery 134 E. Juneau Ave., Milwaukee rouguesgallerymke@gmail.com
March 19–25 Monday, 9:00–2:00 a.m., Wednesday–Thursday: 9:00 p.m.–2:00 a.m., Friday–Saturday, 9:00 p.m.–2:30 a.m. Reception: March 22, 5:00–9:00 p.m.
Jesse Bernhardt was born and raised in Janesville, WI, and is a recent graduate of Western Illinois University where he majored in history with a studio art minor. He fell in love with printmaking during the 2011–2012 school year. Jesse has made numerous silkscreen prints that have been used by Pabst Brewing Company for public advertisements across the nation.
Monika Meler
Jesse Bernhardt
Roger L. Steele
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Contemporary Prints
Tory Folliard Gallery 233 N. Milwaukee St., Milwaukee 414-273-7311, toryfolliard.com
March 15–April 15Friday, 11:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Saturday, 11:00 a.m.–4:00 p.m.Reception: March 22, 5:00–7:30 p.m.
Better known for their paintings, this exhibition demonstrates their expertise in making monotypes, etchings, mixed media prints and limited edition prints.
Exhibition includes: Derrick Buisch, Mary Jones, Mark Mulhem, Dennis Nechvatal, Fred Stonehouse, Tom Uttech, John Wilde and T.L. Solien.
Uprisings: Images of Labor
UWM Union Art Gallery 2200 E. Kenwood Blvd., W199, Milwaukee 414-229-6310 http://www.aux.uwm.edu/union/art_gallery/U
March 21–29 Monday, Tuesday, Friday, Noon–5:00 p.m., Thursday, Noon–7:00 p.m.Reception: March 21, 7:00–10:00 p.m.Artist Talks/Presentations: March 22 and 23, 9:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m.
An exhibition based on the theme of labor hangs from the sky, individual and collaborative work occurs on the ground, and artists align their work with local and international social justice movements. Included in the evolving installation is Justseeds artists, the Combat Paper Project, guest artists and a two-day schedule of artists’ talks and discussions about art and activism. All talks are free and open to the public.
Banyan Hearts Portfolio
Mandel Creative Studio 120 N. Broadway St., Milwaukee
The recent printmaking workshop at Banyan Hearts Studio thoroughly celebrated the true spirit and strength of printmaking as a medium of expression. Printmaking as a form of art is often not given the importance that it rightly deserves in India. As such, workshops like the present one, where artists of varied ages work together, rekindle an enthusiasm for the medium among the artists as well as the art lovers. The collection of prints by all 15 artists including Laxma Goud, Chippa Sudhakar, Krishna Reddy, Dara Larson and Nirmal Raja makes for an exquisite portfolio that every art enthusiast would love to cherish forever.
Hurry or Your Ears Won’t See What I’ve Made: Erin Close and Timothy Westbrook
The Pfister Hotel Gallery 424 E. Wisconsin Ave., Milwaukee http://www.thepfisterhotel.com/artist-in-residence
March 20–23 7:00 a.m.–9:00 p.m. dailyReception: March 22, 5:00–9:00 p.m.
Both Erin and Timothy were raised around people with an absence of vision—Erin with her parents and Timothy with his grandfather. This instilled a heightened awareness of physical presence in them both. The pair has transformed this acuteness in their relationship with materials and tools. The tape of an audiocassette mirrors yarn as the starting point for a potential experience. Through the playing of the tape and the weaving of the yarn a sensory experience is performed. The repetitive function of a slate and stylus for writing Braille echo the marking on a plate in printmaking, both building to a completed sensorial language. Work will be created live throughout the conference. Erin and Timothy invite you to feel with your eyes and listen with your hands.
Laxma Goud
Erin Close
Derrick Buisch
Justseeds Artists’ Cooperative
EXHIBITIONS (Off-Campus)
92 | 93
EXHIBITIONS
EXHIBITIONS
MARNsalon IV
Mandel Creative Studio, Marine Terminal Building 120 N. Broadway, Milwaukee, WI 53202
March 15–30Reception: March 22, 5:00–8:00 p.m.
The MARNsalon Exhibition Series is a multi faceted professional development program. Committee selects MARN members and artists are granted a valuable level of exposure to invited Guest Curators. For this exhibition MARN has asked Wilhelm van Rensburg to write a purview to frame our exhibition. Van Rensburg is Research Fellow at the Visual Identities in Art and Design (VIAD) Research Centre, Faculty of Art, Design and Architecture (FADA), University of Johannesburg (UJ), South Africa.
Here is a summary of his purview:
“Amidst a barrage of criticism leveled at socially engaged art/participatory art/social practice in art - that it is neither politically efficacious nor aesthetically compelling - one mitigating statement seems to recur: ‘It’s heart is in the right place’. Coming from a country, South Africa, with a long tradition of resistance art, I am interested in acts of defiance (whether conceptually, or in praxis) in order to determine how this trope can be conceived of as ‘art’.”
EXHIBITIONS (Off-Campus)
94 | 95
NOTES
EXHIBITIONS
EXHIBITIONS
Virtual Exhibition: Print Revolution in America and the Wisconsin Presence
www.printrevolutioninamerica.com
March 20–23, 24/7
History is an account of past events, and as such, it requires time, distance and perspective to determine what has lasting importance. The subject addressed in this show is fine art printmaking, and the revolution and rebirth that occurred in the graphic arts beginning in the 1940s. From that time until today, the Print Revolution in America spread rapidly and reverberated across the nation, ultimately influencing the entire world. This exhibit defines that Renaissance through the eyes of Ronald L. Ruble and his collection of fine art prints. It provides a snapshot of the work of in excess of 100 of these creative and dedicated printmakers who were able to establish themselves and their work in the realm of this chapter in art history. Wisconsin and its artist/printmakers were major players in this rebirth. Enjoy the visit!
Surrounding Metro Area
Surfacing: Jessica Meuninck-Ganger and Nathaniel Stern
Lynden Sculpture Garden 2145 W. Brown Deer Rd., Milwaukee 414-446-8794, http://lyndensculpturegarden.org
February 3–March 24Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday, 10 a.m.–5 p.m., Saturday and Sunday, Noon–5:00 p.m.Tour: March 23, 9:00 a.m.–2:00 p.m.
Jessica Meuninck-Ganger and Nathaniel Stern show the most recent fruits of their collaboration in conjunction with Print:MKE, the SGCI Print Conference. In addition to works that fuse printmaking and video, they will be showing a three-dimensional work related to the screen-based work and will be creating a new installation in the porch windows at Lynden that continues their exploration of surfaces, layers, membranes, matrices and the physical relationship between viewer and object. Also on view are prints from the Bradley Family Foundation collection.
Shades of Gray: Black and White Graphics from RAM’s Collection
Racine Art Museum 441 Main St., Racine 262-638-8300, http://www.ramart.org
February 17–May 12 Tuesday–Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m., Sunday, Noon–5:00 p.m., Closed Mondays, federal holidays and EasterThe Museum Store closes at 4:45 p.m. daily
This exhibition features modern and contemporary prints and books from RAM’s collection that emphasize a black and white color scheme. Selections include Warrington Colescott, David Hockney, John Wilde and examples from the New York City Federal Art Project.
Jessica Meuninck-Ganger and Nathaniel Stern
David Hockney
Ronald L. Ruble
EXHIBITIONS (Off-Campus)
96 | 97
NOTES
PRODUCT
+
PUBLISHER
FAIR
PRODUCT
+
PUBLISHER
FAIR
Akua Speedball speedballart.com
Anderson Ranch Arts Center andersonranch.org
Atlantic Papers atlanticpapers.com
Awagami Factory awagami.or.jp
Caligo Printmaking Inks cranfield-colours.co.uk
Cape Fear Press capefearpress.com
Conrad Machine Company conradmachine.com
Crown Point Press crownpoint.com
Digital Art Studio Seminars digitalartstudioseminars.com
Edward C. Lyons Co. eclyons.com
Gamblin Artist Colors gamblincolors.com
Graphic Chemical and Ink Company graphicchemical.com
GRS Tools/Glendo Corp. glendo.com
Hampton Editions, LTD Hampton Editions, LTD
Highpoint Center for Printmaking highpointprintmaking.org
Hiromi Paper, Inc. hiromipaper.com
Hook Pottery Paper
kleinprint kleinprint.net
Legion Paper legionpaper.com
Manhattan Graphics Center manhattangraphicscenter.org
McClain’s Printmaking Supplies imcclains.com
New Academy Press newacademypress.com
Paper Connection International paperconnection.com
Penland School of Crafts penland.org
Renaissance Graphic Arts printmaking-materials.com
Savoir Faire savoirfaire.com
Takach Press Corporation takachpress.com
Texas Tech University, Tech Print Club facebook.com/TechPrintClub
The Japanese Paper Place japanesepaperplace.com
TMI Screen Printing Equipment tmiscreenprinting.com
Utrecht Art Supplies utrecht.com
UWSP Department of Art and Design uwsp.edu/art-design/
Aaron Galleries aarongalleries.com
Anchor Graphics colum.edu/anchorgraphics
California Society of Printmakers caprintmakers.wordpress.com
Cannonball Press cannonballpress.com
Carrier Pigeon Illustrated Fiction and Fine Art carrierpigeonmag.com
CFPR Editions uwe.ac.uk/sca/research/cfpreditions/
CultureStrike culturestrike.net
Drive by Press drivebypress.com
Ground Up Press groundup.bigcartel.com
Justseeds Artist’s Cooperative justseeds.org
Midwest Pressed etsy.com/shop/midwestpressed
Midwest Matrix LLC / Lily Press LC midwestmatrix.info
Muskat Studios muskatstudios.com
New Academy Press newacademypress.com
Normal Editions Workshop cfa.ilstu.edu/normal_editions/
Red Trillium Press redtrilliumpress.com
RedLine Milwaukee redlineartmke.org
Society of American Graphic Artists sagaprints.org
Spark Box Studio sparkboxstudio.com
Spudnik Press Cooperative spudnikpress.com
Stampede Press stampedepress.com
Tandem Press tandempress.wisc.edu/
The Firecracker Press firecrackerpress.com
Two Tone Press twotonepress.yolasite.com
Women’s Studio Workshop wsworkshop.org
Woodland Pattern Book Center woodlandpattern.org
Product Fair Participants
UWM Zelazo Ballroom
Thursday, Friday, Saturday, 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Publisher Fair Participants
MIAD Rooms 355, 365, 375, 385
Friday 9:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Saturday 9:00 a.m. – 3:00 p.m.
98 | 99
SPONSORS
SPONSORS
SPONSORS:
*Entry forms and complete guidelines may be foundat the A.I.M.P.E website: http://miniprint.awagami.jp
http://miniprint.awagami.jp email: miniprint@awagami.jp
www.awagami.com
The A.I.M.P.E Mini Print Exhibition is an international juried call to all printmakers who create a print on any washi paper. Awagami Factory and the ‘Museum of Awa Japanese Handmade Paper’ are hosting this inagural exhibition to increase global understanding of the creative possibilities of printmaking while showing traditional craftspeople their skills are still relevant and appreciated by todays international printmakers.
アワガミ国際ミニプリント展
SPONSORS
SPONSORS
QUAD GRAPHICS
Since its inception in 1980, Print Forum has maintained a diverse and engaged membership of print and drawing enthusiasts, collectors, dealers, artists, and students.
The group sponsors public lectures by art historians, artists,
master printers, dealers, collectors, and publishers; private
workshops on connoisseurship and printmaking techniques;
and member field trips to exhibitions, artists’ studios, and
private collections. The organization also offers opportunities
to help build your personal collection. The focus varies for each
event and covers a wide range of interests, from Old Master
to modern and contemporary works on paper. Further, Print
Forum is proud to provide support for acquisitions of prints,
drawings, and artists’ books for the Museum’s Collection.
Warrington Colescott (American, b. 1921), Santiago Calatrava at the Bal du Lac, 2001. Color soft-ground etching, aquatint, and spit bite aquatint, and relief rolls through stencils. Gift of Print Forum M2001.104. Photo by Michael Tropea. © Warrington Colescott.
would like to extend our welcome and are proud
to support Print:MKE!
. . . SINCE 1975 .
. .
TAK
ACH PRESS CORPORATION
Takach Press Corporation Takach Paper Company 800 248-3460 877 611-7197 www.TakachPress.com www.TakachPaper.com
Printers of fine art books, brochures, and all marketing communications.
110 0 0 West Becher St reet West A l l i s , W I 53227 | 414 -321- 470 0
SPONSORS
SPONSORS
NOTES
104 | 105
Speedball is proud to welcome Akua printmaking inks into its family of brands. Developed by professional printmaker Susan Rostow, Akua inks deliver brilliant colors, strong blacks, and unmatched working properties.
TO FIND OUT MORE OR TO SEE A PRODUCT DEMONSTRATION, VISIT THE SPEEDBALL BOOTHS, #27 AND #28.
RESOURCES
RESOURCES
106 | 107
Conference Hotels
Comfort Inn & Suites916 E. State St.Milwaukee, WI 53202414-276-8800
Conference rate is $72, plus tax per night; please mention SGCI Conference room block to receive the rate. The Astor Hotel924 E. JuneauMilwaukee, WI 53202414-271-4220
Conference rate is $89, plus tax per night for queen guest rooms and $109 for double queen; please mention SGCI Conference room block or MIAD room block to receive the rate. The Plaza Hotelhttp://www.plazahotelmilwaukee.com/1007 N. Cass StreetMilwaukee, Wisconsin 53202414 276 2101
Conference rates are $69, plus tax per night; please mention SGCI Conference or UWM + MIAD to receive the discounted rates.
Transportation
ShuttlesShuttles will be provided to the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design’s and University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s campuses, and to other conference events, with pickup from the conference hotels and service throughout the day and evening. This service is free to all registrants; however, a valid conference badge will be required to board the shuttle. Shuttle schedule will follow shortly.
Airport/Airport TransportationMilwaukee’s airport is General Mitchell International Airport. For information on airport transportation, including taxi and public transit options, please visit Milwaukee County’s General Mitchell International Airport website.
TaxiLocal taxi services include the following:American United Taxicab Services 414-220-5000Yellow Cab Co-Op 414-271-1800
Public TransitMilwaukee County Transit System offers adult bus fares at $2.25. Please see their website for routes and schedules.
RESOURCES
Rental CarPlease check with each company for rates.Alamo 1-800-327-9633/TDD 305-468-2132Avis 1-800-831-2847/TDD 800-331-2323Budget 1-800-527-0700/TDD 800-826-5510Dollar Car Rental 1-800-800-4000Enterprise 1-800-325-8007/TDD 800-736-8227Hertz 1-800-654-3131/TDD 800-654-2280National 1-800-328-4567/TDD 800-328-6323Thrifty Car Rental 1-800-847-4389
MIAD ParkingSurface Lot—$3 a day, approximately three blocks from MIAD631 E. Chicago St. (corner of Chicago and Jackson—entrance on Jackson) adjacent to Italian Community Center
Historic Third Ward Parking Structures—$10 for up to 10 hours, two to three blocks from MIAD212 N. Milwaukee Street (Corner of Milwaukee and Chicago—entrance on Milwaukee)225 E. Chicago Street (Corner of Water and Chicago—entrance on Chicago)
UWM ParkingParking is prepaid across campus except in the Student Union garage (2200 E. Kenwood Blvd.) and Lubar Hall garage (3202 N. Maryland Ave.). Parking fees are enforced Monday–Saturday, 7:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m.www4.uwm.edu/parking/visitors/campus_first_timers.cfm Hourly ParkingPay Stations: $0.85/hourCunningham, Sciences, Kunkle, Sandburg and Zelazo Parking Meters: $0.85/hourChapman, EnderisHeating Plant and Alumni HousePosted Public Hours Only (After 3:00 p.m. Monday–Friday, 7:00 a.m.–8:00 p.m. Saturday)
Cashiered: $1.25/hour, $12/day maximumStudent Union garage, Lubar Hall garage (during public hours)
Campus parking map: http://www4.uwm.edu/map/parkingmap.cfm
City of MilwaukeeParking Regulations: www.city.milwaukee.gov/mpw/divisions/administrative/parking/ParkingRegulations.htm
Night Parking Permits: www.city.milwaukee.gov/mpw/divisions/administrative/parking/ParkingPermits.htm
Accommodations and Transit
Most conference events will take place on the Milwaukee Institute of Art & Design’s and UWM’s campuses with shuttle buses running from the conference hotels, Comfort Inn & Suites and The Astor Hotel. For more information about visiting Milwaukee, check out Visit Milwaukee. http://www.milwaukee.org/
RESOURCES
RESOURCES
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UWM - MAIN CAMPUSSOUTH TO KENILWORTH, MIAD, HOTELS | EAST TO LAKE
SHOREWOOD
RIVER WEST
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ZELAZO CENTER2419 E. KENWOOD BLVD.
KSE > HOTEL > MIAD
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MIAD / HISTORIC THIRD WARDNORTH TO UWM MAIN CAMPUS, KENILWORTH, HOTELS | EAST TO LAKE
UWM - MAIN CAMPUSSOUTH TO KENILWORTH, MIAD, HOTELS | EAST TO LAKE
SHOREWOOD
RIVER WEST
HISTORIC THIRD WARD
WALKER’S POINT
BAY VIEW
UWM MAIN CAMPUS
KENILWORTH
MIAD
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ZELAZO CENTER2419 E. KENWOOD BLVD.
KSE > HOTEL > MIAD
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RIVERWEST GALLERIES DURING THURS. EVENTS
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UWM - MAIN CAMPUSSOUTH TO KENILWORTH, MIAD, HOTELS | EAST TO LAKE
SHOREWOOD
RIVER WEST
HISTORIC THIRD WARD
WALKER’S POINT
BAY VIEW
UWM MAIN CAMPUS
KENILWORTH
MIAD
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ZELAZO CENTER2419 E. KENWOOD BLVD.
KSE > HOTEL > MIAD
MAM DURING HOURS
RIVERWEST GALLERIES DURING THURS. EVENTS
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WAT
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MIAD
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ST PAUL AVE
CHICAGO ST
MENOMONEE ST
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STUDENT UNION
PECK SCHOOLOF THE ARTS
GOLDA MEIRLIBRARY
MITCHELLHALL
PRO
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ZELAZOCENTER
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KANE PL
UWM - KENILWORTHNORTH TO UWM MAIN CAMPUS | SOUTH TO MIAD, HOTELS
MIAD / HISTORIC THIRD WARDNORTH TO UWM MAIN CAMPUS, KENILWORTH, HOTELS | EAST TO LAKE
UWM - MAIN CAMPUSSOUTH TO KENILWORTH, MIAD, HOTELS | EAST TO LAKE
SHOREWOOD
RIVER WEST
HISTORIC THIRD WARD
WALKER’S POINT
BAY VIEW
UWM MAIN CAMPUS
KENILWORTH
MIAD
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HOTELS
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221
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211 5
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7 8
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944U
MILWAUKEE COUNTY TRANSIT SYSTEM
S
ZELAZO CENTER2419 E. KENWOOD BLVD.
KSE > HOTEL > MIAD
MAM DURING HOURS
RIVERWEST GALLERIES DURING THURS. EVENTS
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THE CITY OF MILWAUKEENEIGHBORHOODS AND PROXIMITIES
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7 10
12 13 14
30
GREEN
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1
MILWAUKEE COUNTY TRANSIT SYSTEM
14
2 3
4 5 6
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13 S
SHUTTLE
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315 316 317
318 319
310 311
321
1 20611
321 322 323
V
MUSEUM
VILLA TERRACE
CHARLES ALLIS
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W EKENILWORTH SQ. E1925 E. KENILWORTH PL HOTEL > MIAD > UWM
MAM DURING HOURS
RIVERWEST GALLERIES DURING THURS. EVENTS
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STOP 3
1
3
5 6
7 10
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15
1RED
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MILWAUKEE COUNTY TRANSIT SYSTEM
3
5 6
7 8 9
10 13 14
4
2N
S
W E
S
SHUTTLE
MIAD273 E. ERIE ST
UWM > KSE > HOTEL
MAM DURING HOURS
RIVERWEST GALLERIES DURING THURS. EVENTS
DOWNTOWN GALLERIES DURING PRINT CRAWL
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V
MUSEUM
VILLA TERRACE
CHARLES ALLIS
C
H
HAGGERTY
M
MILWAUKEE ART MUSEUM
D
S
N
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W E
DISCOVERY WORLD
S
SHUTTLE
HOTEL 916 E. STATE ST
MIAD > UWM > KSE
MAM DURING HOURS
RIVERWEST GALLERIES DURING THURS. EVENTS
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
112 | 113
MIAD
Neil Hoffman, President, Milwaukee Institute of Art & DesignDavid Martin, Vice President of Academic Affairs,
Milwaukee Institute of Art & DesignRina Yoon, 2013 SCGI Conference Co-ChairTim Abel, Student-Driven Event SubcommitteeSteven Anderson, MIAD ExhibitionsBraden Baer, Student Administrative AssistantPhil Belair, Design/Art DirectionTyanna Buie, Off-Campus Exhibitions Coordinator,
Demonstrations SubcommitteePolly Caster, MIAD Alumni Exhibition SubcommitteeJoshua Christensen, Student-Driven Event SubcommitteeJennifer Crandall, Volunteer Sub CommitteeJamal Currie, Projects SubcommitteeZoe Darling, MIAD Alumni Exhibition Subcommittee ChairMelissa Dorn Richards, Steering Committee, MIAD Alumni
Exhibition Subcommittee, Budget Subcommittee, Events and Receptions Subcommittee Chair, Conference Services Subcommittee
Waldek Dynerman, Steering Committee, Student-Driven Event Subcommittee
Leslie Fedorchuk, Panels and Presentations Subcommittee ChairStephanie Gage, Student-Driven Event SubcommitteeJenie Gao, Panel and Presentations SubcommitteeAdrian Gilling, Logo and Promotional Items DesignerMike Goetz, Facilities SubcommitteeAlexandra Grace, Promotional Items DesignerMarie Kaminski, Facilities Subcommittee,
Demonstrations SubcommitteeBrittany Kowalski, Student Administrative AssistantJenny Krantz, Host Subcommittee Chair,
Transportation SubcommitteeMarie Larson, Publishers’ Fair ChairMark Lawson, International Exhibition Subcommittee,
MIAD ExhibitionsPaul Mitchell, Fellowship Exhibition CoordinatorMatt Ogden, Tech/AV Services Subcommittee ChairJes O’Hearn, Demonstrations Subcommittee ChairDave O’Meara, Web Subcommittee ChairVivian Rothschild, Steering Committee, Marketing and
Communications Subcommittee, Co-ChairStacey Steinberg, Demonstrations SubcommitteeLouisa Walker, Marketing and Communications SubcommitteeTravis Whitty, Technology/AV Services SubcommitteeJulie Xiong, Website Designer
UWM
Michael R Lovell, Chancellor, University of Wisconsin-MilwaukeeScott Emmons, Interim Dean, Peck School of the ArtsKim Cosier, Interim Associate Dean, Peck School of the ArtsThomas J. Danner, Center for Latin American and Caribbean StudiesYevgeniya Kagonovich, Chair, Department of Art and DesignJessica Meuninck-Ganger, 2013 SCGI Conference Co-ChairChristine Barclay, PSOA Box OfficeRaoul Deal, International Exhibition Coordinator, MexicoMark Eckman, Center for International EducationJay Fox, Facilities Subcommittee, Student-Driven Event
Subcommittee, Demonstrations SubcommitteeJeff Ganger, Conference Program DesignerLee Ann Garrison, Executive Director, Design Research InstituteKari Garon, Themed Portfolio Subcommittee, ChairYoko Hattori, Steering Committee, Administrative Assistant and
Student Conference LiaisonBruce Knackert, International Exhibition SubcommitteeSeth Kniffin, Facilities InternCalley Kohlhagen, Student Administrative AssistantSierra Korthof, Conference Program DesignerAnna Krajcik, Web and Print Design SubcommitteeSara Krewjewski, International Exhibition SubcommitteeJustin Kunesh, Marketing and CommunicationsNicolas Lampert, Justseeds Exhibition LiaisonMelissa Wagner-Lawler, Demonstrations Subcommittee,
Sponsor CoordinatorGreg Martens, Product Fair Chair, Facilities Subcommittee,
Conference ServicesBrenda Neigbauer, Conference Program DesignerChadwick Noellert, Student-Driven Event Subcommittee,
Facilities SubcommitteeCheryl Olson-Sklar, Awards Subcommittee, ChairJosie Osborne, Awards Subcommittee, Volunteer CoordinatorPickle Palmer, Facilities InternLinda Corbin Pardee, UWM Union ProgrammingPatrice Petro, Vice Provost for International EducationWilhelm Van Rensburg, International Exhibition Coordinator,
South AfricaNicole Schanen, Marketing and Communications SubcommitteeLeah Schrieber-Johnson, Open Portfolio, ChairEllen Friebert Schupper, Steering Committee, Marketing and
Communications Subcommittee, Co-ChairMelody Sorenson, Design InternChrista Story, International Exhibition Subcommittee, ChairCorey Smith, Studio Arts and Crafts Center Manager, Student-
Driven Events Subcommittee, UWM Print Club PresidentRandall Trumbull-Holper, PSOA Director of Facilities
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Generous underwriting for the printing of this conference program has been provided by Quad Graphics.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
114
HTTP://SGCINTERNATIONAL.ORG
HTTP://PRINTMKE2013.ORG
50THANNIVERSARY!
To learn more about the SGC International and Print: MKE conference, visit:
2012-2013
Print artists make. We get ink on our hands
and under our nails. We draw, scratch and
etch. We work our images over time, opening
ourselves to how making informs our thinking
and how thinking informs our making. Our work
inspires us, speaks to us and transforms us as
we inspire, speak to and transform our work.
Working with materials, tools, machines and
emerging technologies, we forge and reinvent
the visual language of printmaking. Join us in
Milwaukee, a city long known for its makers
and its making, where we will celebrate
making in print.
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