Posts Tagged ‘show’

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When I walked into the PLU Gallery this morning to document the Mnemonic Sampler show when it opens, my brain had somewhat of a short circuit. Since I was out of town for the past few days, all of the installation work was done for me (thank you a million times over, Heather Cornelius!)—so this was the first time I’d laid eyes on the work since framing it up and chucking the pieces in a box. I somehow couldn’t connect the finished work on the walls with the crazy, chaotic process of the past few months. It seemed so simple, like this was somebody else’s show, and all the nail-biting and never-ending futzing I’d been doing was for some other project that would remain unfinished forever. But I did finish it—and there it is!

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I was nervous about the possible absurdity of having twenty-six small pieces in a colossally huge space, but somehow, it works. Heather ingeniously used lighting and visual breaks to transform the gallery into a space that draws the viewer and creates an intimate experience—which is exactly what I hoped for. Heather, I owe you big.

On to the work itself. Here is the artist statement for the exhibit:

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The alphabet is one of the first lessons we learn as children. From the beginning we learn to use it as a mnemonic device—just like “Roy G. Biv,” or “Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge”—assigning meaning to our world by associating symbols with each letter. Because the alphabet is one of our most basic and effective memory tools, we are drawn to it as both a visual and narrative archetype. It’s not surprising, then, that the abecedary is somewhat of a staple among book artists.

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Just as we use our ABCs as a memory aid, our possessions help us create the concept of Home. No matter what our economic station, living situation, or domestic permanence, we all tend to share similar symbols of comfort and nostalgia. These ideals are embodied in the everyday objects around us—those mundane materials we take for granted, yet without which we would sense something lacking. As someone who has never had a picket fence, who grew up in a nomadic military family, and who has lived her entire life with relatively few possessions, the archetypal Home should seem foreign to me. Yet the same mnemonic triggers exist in my mind; the same objects attract me.

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Mnemonic Sampler collects and files our household icons, gathered together like the stitched and quilted samplers of our mothers and grandmothers. The hand-stitched alphabet enumerates my, your, our trappings, shuffling our collective domestic inventory like the old card game of Memory. Each symbol is familiar; each object is Ours, whether we actually possess it or not. Together they sketch out a Home—real or imagined; longed-for or spurned; past, present, or future.

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Mnemonic Sampler is a collection of monoprints, which means that instead of an edition of multiples, each print is created in such a way that it can’t exactly be reproduced. This technique results in a one-of-a-kind, totally unique piece—and is often more closely related to painting than printmaking. These pieces are printed from reduction-cut linoleum blocks—meaning both print colors are carved from the same block.

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So once the second design is carved, the first color cannot be printed again.

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Designing these pieces was an intuitive process, consisting of both logical and intangible choices of fabric and pattern compositions. Because the design stage was so fluid (almost semi-conscious at times), it really wasn’t possible to do the printing on a press. Instead, each impression was made literally by hand, using masking tape to aid in color registration.

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“Q” has an extra conceptual level, since the fabric background is a patchwork “quilt” in its own right. Like everything else about the series, the patchwork is sewn by hand, using the English paper piecing technique.

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This was my first attempt at paper piecing, and I’m pleasantly surprised at how quick and accurate it is. Instead of folding and ironing every tiny piece, then wrangling a sewing machine, each patch is wrapped around a paper template and basted down, then whip-stitched together into a block.

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The result is a precise little quilt—perfect for embroidery.

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I can’t believe how long it took to complete every step of the process—and yet how quickly everything came together at the end. So you can bet I’m excited about celebrating at the opening tonight. And besides, I’m interested to see if the household objects I chose will resonate with viewers; it wasn’t easy to narrow things down to twenty-six letters of the alphabet, so I picked those objects that had the most meaning for me.

So how about it—what spells “Home” for you?

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Finally, something tangible to show you! This is the point where all of the elements for my new body of work are just starting to come together. The past couple of months have been somewhat of a nail-biter—sometimes I wonder what possessed me to create twenty-six new pieces for a last-minute show. Now that the promo postcards (see above) are in hand and I can see the finish line, however, I can tell that my instincts knew what they were doing.

Mnemonic Sampler is my new solo show, opening October 14 at the PLU University Gallery. Here are the details:

Mnemonic Sampler: An Abecedary by Chandler O’Leary
October 14 to November 11
University Gallery, Ingram Hall
Pacific Lutheran University, Tacoma, WA
Opening Reception: Wednesday, October 14, 5-7 pm
Open Monday – Friday, 8 am – 4 pm
For more information, call 253.535.7573 or email soac [at] plu [dot] edu

On display will be something of a room-sized artist book, consisting of twenty-six hand-embroidered monoprints on calico (a monoprint is the opposite of an edition, a one-of-a-kind piece). Together the prints form an abecedary, or alphabet, and tell the story of how our concepts and ideals of “Home” are linked to the everyday objects that surround us. More on this topic when the show opens, but for now, here’s a peek (since the work is not quite finished, a peek is all I’ve got for now):

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Many, many thanks to the talented and infinitely helpful Katie Skovholt at PLU, who took care of having show postcards printed and mailed (!), orchestrated every logistic detail, and who has made the whole process as smooth as pumpkin pie. I would have long since lost my mind if it weren’t for you, Katie!

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Speaking of amazing women who run galleries, another big thank-you and shout-out to Laura Russell of 23 Sandy Gallery in Portland, for featuring End of the Line on the promo materials for another new show that opens tonight. Broadsided! is national, juried exhibition of letterpress broadsides featuring the work of thirty-four artists. Here are the details from the 23 Sandy website:

Broadsided! The Intersection of Art and Literature
October 2-31, 2009
23 Sandy Gallery
623 NE 23rd Avenue
Portland, OR 97232
Opening reception: Friday, October 2, 6-9 pm

Open Thursday-Saturday 12-6 pm and by appointment

Before books, before blogs and before broadcasts, there were broadsides. Historically, single sheet broadsheet posters were ephemeral in nature. They were developed in the fifteenth century for royal proclamations, official notices and even advertisements. Today, broadsides hang at the intersection of art and literature. Letterpress printed broadsides are valued as fine art designed and printed by a true craftsperson; but also as fine literature featuring stellar poetry or prose.

The best part about the Broadsided! exhibit is that you don’t have to be local to see it! Laura has set up a fantastic online catalogue of the work in the show, with photos and the complete text from each broadside. Nothing beats seeing art in person, of course, but if you can’t make it to Portland this fall, this is a brilliant alternative.

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Swatch books are very near the top of my list of Favorite Things Ever. There is something so satisfying about having every color, pattern, texture, or finish right at your fingertips. I love sitting at my table, with a cup of tea in hand and six hundred sample chips spread out before me, ready for some serious color theory. (In case you’re wondering, this is the amaze-a-crazy DMC embroidery floss über color card. Well-made swatch books like this tend to be expensive to produce, and impossible to find once they go out of print. So if you’re into this sort of thing, I’d suggest snagging your copy before they decide to quit selling them.)

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These days the studio has been an explosion of choices. Snippets of fabric and open dictionaries have taken over my life as I get ready for a new solo show, which opens October 14 at the Pacific Lutheran University Gallery. Stay tuned for more details in the next few weeks.

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I wish I had something more concrete to show you, but this is one of those projects where everything comes together at once, right at the end (which can be as nerve-wracking as it is rewarding). I’ve got to say, though, that calico—finished or not—sure makes for pretty pictures.

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There’s some serious gear-shifting going on in the studio these days. The Woolworth Windows murals are white walls again, ready for the next artist to transform the space. Prop Cake is sold out, and we’re down to the very last Tugboat Thea (now sold out, too—thanks!). I’m preparing to teach a digital letterpress class at the School of Visual Concepts next month, and my new artist book project is beginning to take shape (more on that topic later). I feel like I’m in that tiny, transitional moment between exhale and inhale.

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In between all these deep breaths and ambitious projects, I’ve been getting back to basics, and enjoying the simple mechanics of drawing, carving, and printing images. No fancy photopolymer plates this time—just ink, paper, watercolor, and good old linoleum blocks.

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What started as an excuse to get my little Kelsey tabletop press in working order has turned into a budding interest in birding. There is a stunning array of avian wildlife in the region; I’m just creating a tiny illustrated cross-section of what’s out there.

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The suite tweet of prints is called Flock, and the first nine are currently on display at the Rosewood Café in Tacoma until July 31.

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Each print is a hand-colored linocut, printed in an edition of 25, and priced (unframed) at $25. There will be 25 birds in all, and at the end of the series, there will be ten handmade boxed sets—each containing all 25 birds.

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If you can’t make it to the Rosewood (the prints there are framed and priced at $100), you can find the birds on Etsy. I’ll be printing more birds in August, and the Flock box sets will be finished sometime in February—eight of the ten sets are spoken for already, but if you’re interested, feel free to drop me a line. I’ll just be in the studio, happily chirping, cawing, quacking, and twittering away.

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Sorry for the radio silence, folks. I’ve been having a whole slew of outage and email problems lately; this is the first time in several days I’ve even been able to access my own blog to let you know. Needless to say, over the last few days I’ve been inches away from hurtling bricks at my computer screen in impotent, apoplectic rage learned a fair heap about source code and ICANN regulations. I’m not sure what everyone else has seen on their end, but if you’ve gotten any error messages, network time-outs or sinister-looking download prompts when you try to access this site, I apologize. I’m in the process of booting my old host, transferring my domain and switching everything over to a new system; there might be some more down-time in the next few days.

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In the meantime, these photos are a little taste of what I’ve been trying to write about lately;

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hopefully I’ll be able to share it with you soon.

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Oh, and since my email is the biggest part of the problem, you might have had a message or twelve rejected lately (sorry; again with the apopleptic rage). I’m running on my back-up address at the moment; feel free to drop me a line at anagram[dot]press[at]gmail[dot]com until things get straightened out.

By the way, I’m off to take down the To the Letter show. To everyone who took the time to browse the work, stop to chat, write a blurb or lend a hand: so many thanks. You made this thing a huge success.

See you on the other side.

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When I was growing up I used to raid my dad’s personal collection of books whenever I was looking for new reading material. We had bookcases all over the house, but I could always depend on that one in the hallway for the discovery of a new favorite. Those shelves introduced me to some of my favorite authors, and some of my most vivid memories are recalled passages from Steinbeck, or Salinger, or what have you. That bookcase also exposed me to some seriously weird stuff (which probably went a long way in teaching me to march to the beat of my own drummer—and therefore survive things like high school), writing that I didn’t begin to understand until years later. One book that I went back to several times, attracted to its sheer strangeness, was Revenge of the Lawn, by Richard Brautigan; the title story was my favorite. I’m pretty sure most of the similes and imagery flew over my teenage head at the time, but I loved the fact that something could be so entertaining and emotional, and yet so bizarre. (And I fully blame Brautigan for my own rambling, tangential, parenthetical writing tendencies.)

Last month I got an email from City Arts Magazine, asking if I’d illustrate the cover and feature story of the next issue; they were doing an article on Richard Brautigan’s Tacoma roots. I did a double-take—wait a minute, Brautigan lived in Tacoma?

So I re-read “Revenge of the Lawn,” and was amazed at how much my new perspective of being a Washington/Tacoma resident changed the story for me. Even the more straightforward lines like “He was selling a vision of eternal oranges and sunshine door to door in a land where people ate apples and it rained a lot” took on an almost tangible layer of meaning. (I love that “I’ve Been There!” feeling when I read. It makes me want to run and tell everyone I know: See that passage there? I know exactly what he’s talking about!)

Illustrating Brautigan, or text about Brautigan, was a whole different matter, however. What could I possibly say with a picture what such a vividly visual writer hasn’t already said with words? This is the guy who wrote, “The creek was like 12,845 telephone booths in a row with high Victorian ceilings and all the doors taken off and all the backs of the booths knocked out,” after all.

I mulled it over for awhile, and decided to take him literally. This was a pretty odd experience for me, because I was always trained to make illustrations that add to or change the meaning of a text—and to avoid didactic images like the plague. Somehow, though, for this project, I felt that actually cramming as many Victorian-style phone booths as possible onto the spread would highlight the humor and absurdity of Brautigan’s words.

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Or maybe I just really wanted to draw pictures of trout.

Anyway, the text is all hand-painted with watercolor in a “trouty” palette, and references Victorian-era typography and psychedelic graphic design (which itself references Victorian-era typography … the trout swallows its tail). If you’re local, you can pick up your copy for free at a whole slew of locations in and around Tacoma this month. The original watercolors are on display in the To the Letter exhibit through April 30.

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I love gallery talks—they’re a rare opportunity not only to meet the artist, but also to hear his or her thoughts and anecdotes on the making of the artwork itself. And since my own gallery talk on Sunday was limited to a local audience, this month I thought I’d give an online guided tour of the pieces in To the Letter. Besides, in a blog post I don’t have to worry about my enormous fear of public speaking, or hear myself say “Uh” or “um” twenty-nine times a minute.

Anyway, the only wall piece in the exhibit (and also the only unlabeled piece, since the tag refuses to stick to the wall) is Tugboat Thea, a collaboration with Jessica Spring. The print is an unofficial member of our Feminist Broadside series because of its size, and let me tell you, that sucker is huge.*

And why is it so enormous? Why, it was printed with a steamroller, of course!

Yes, you read that right. The folks at King’s Books asked us to be a part of their fifth annual Wayzgoose** celebration on the first of March, and steamroller printing was the main event. Thanks to a grant from the Tacoma Arts Commission (no really, thank you!), each artist or artist-team was given a four-foot slab of linoleum to carve as they saw fit. Jessica and I decided to pay tribute to Tacoma’s own Thea Foss—business pioneer, Waterway namesake, feminist extraordinaire (though she probably didn’t know it), and inspiration for the Tugboat Annie stories and films.

The trouble was, our Feminist Broadside format relies on a quote by the subject, and we were having an awful time finding anything attributed to Thea herself. Luckily we discovered Finding Thea, the excellent documentary film by Nancy Bourne Haley and Lucy Ostrander—which, by the way, also provided great reference material for sketches.

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Printing tools, including linoleum carving knives.
Tugboat Thea took about a week for the two of us to carve.

This isn’t a great view of my sketch, but it should give a rough idea of the scale we were working with. Because neither of us fancied copying a tiny pencil sketch in reverse, by hand, onto the much larger linoleum slab, we took a shortcut. I had the drawing photocopied at 600% size, and then we placed it face-down onto the linoleum, sprinkled it with mineral spirits, and ran a hot iron over the wet paper. The heated solvent transferred the copy toner onto the linoleum exactly the way we wanted it: backwards.

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Here’s the finished block, inked up and ready to print.

Wait, wait—backwards? Yep, backwards. Here’s why:


Thanks to sweet pea of King’s Books for the video.
(Sorry for the grainy quality, but it was filmed on a mobile phone.)

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That’s Jessica on the left—and Nancy jumped right in to help.

Despite weather that absolutely refused to cooperate and ink turned soupy by the rain, the Wayzgoose was a huge success. We had over 500 people in attendance, and every steamroller artist knocked out at least a few prints.

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The inimitable sweet pea

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We seemed to have stumbled upon a theme for the day: Tacoma in all its hand-lettered glory. Ric Matthies demonstrates his considerable prowess here;

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and while the be-fezzed lads of C.L.A.W. (right) didn’t get the memo about carving things backwards, their first-ever linocut print looks fabulous all the same.

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Chris Sharp, meanwhile, prefers to work his magic with plywood and a router;

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and the accidental glare of the Woolworth Windows is probably a fitting tribute to Beautiful Angle’s piece.

I didn’t get photos of every print (Shannon Eakins and Marc Dombrosky’s amazing blind emboss of a real manhole cover was beyond my skills to photograph), but they’re all currently on view in the Woolworth Windows, at 11th and Broadway in downtown Tacoma.

Since the prints are so unwieldy, and since we only printed a handful of them, we’ve decided to retool the design of Tugboat Thea and print a (smaller!) letterpress edition as the next in the (official) Feminist Broadside series. We’ll unveil the Thea sequel at our lecture at the Tacoma Art Museum on May 12.

I have to say, though, I’m grateful we were able to find a genuine Thea quote—it was either that or this nugget from the old Tugboat Annie stories:

“O.K., ye ol’ gafoozler,” she replied quietly and stood up. “When’s the financial blizzard takin’ over?”

Alright, I admit it: I was mighty tempted.

* So huge I don’t know what to do with my copy; its sheer size makes a mockery of my flat file, and I sure as heck don’t have that kind of wall space.

** Wayzgoose (origin obscure): a celebration given by a master printer to his workmen each year to mark the traditional end of summer and usher in the season of working by candlelight. Generally held as an annual celebration of letterpress and the book arts today.

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Spring made her grand entrance this weekend, sweeping in with the first warm, flawless day of the year—complete with guest appearances by Mount Rainier and the sun. ‘Round these parts, it’s almost criminal to miss a day like that—as evidenced by the sidewalks, parks and shorelines packed with grateful Tacomans.

So believe me, the significance of a big group of steadfast book and art lovers eschewing the perfect weather in favor of hearing me blather on about sketchbooks and photopolymer isn’t lost on me. Many, many thanks to everyone who came to either the gallery talk yesterday or the exhibit opening on Thursday (or both!). You made both events a huge success, and your enthusiastic presence made me feel so welcome to the Pacific Northwest. I’ve been the new kid on the block many times in my life, but I’ve never felt so at home so quickly as I do here in T-town. Thank you.

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Well, the threads are tied, the cases full, the tags in place, and I’ve scanned for typos at least six dozen times. I think we’re ready.

Tomorrow evening is the opening reception for To the Letter, my debut solo show. On view are letterpress prints, textile typography, the Feminist Broadside series, artist books, sketchbooks, and a few surprises. Stop by and say howdy!

To the Letter: Works by Chandler O’Leary
April 1-30, 2009
Collins Memorial Library, University of Puget Sound

Opening reception:
Thursday, April 2, 4:30-7:00 p.m.
Campus map!

Since handwork is the theme of the show (hand-lettering, hand-binding, hand-stitching, etc.), some of my process materials are also on display. Weirdly, this detail is the part I’m most excited about—I’m forever encouraging my students to include sketches, supplies and other behind-the-scenes objects in their gallery shows, but this is the first chance I’ve had to do it myself. My process tends to be particularly convoluted (probably a symptom of O.C.D. or something), so I’m hoping the sight of things like tabletop platen presses and double-pointed knitting needles will spark some interesting conversation.

Speaking of which, Jessica Spring and I are doing a double-header on Sunday. I’ll be giving a guided tour of the exhibit, and Jessica will give a lecture on her newest artist book, Parts Unknown. There’ll be plenty to talk about, so come and pick our brains!

Sunday, April 5, 2009
Collins Memorial Library
(click for gallery talk info)
1:00-1:45 p.m. To the Letter gallery talk with Chandler O’Leary
2:00-3:00 p.m. Parts Unknown presentation with Jessica Spring

Now, if you’ll excuse me, I think I’d better go check for typos one more time.