Message 1
From: Ruth Egnater
Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2011 13:33:08 GMT
Subject: [Baren 43595] 49,50
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Message 2
From: Barbara Mason
Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2011 15:03:11 GMT
Subject: [Baren 43596] Re: Dedicate to Claudia
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Message 3
From: cjchapel # casco.net
Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2011 15:34:36 GMT
Subject: [Baren 43597] Re: ...........Missing 'Charlie Overshoe'
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Message 4
From: "Bea Gold"
Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2011 15:51:05 GMT
Subject: [Baren 43598] Re: ...........Missing 'Charlie Overshoe'
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Message 5
From: Gayle Wohlken
Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2011 15:51:56 GMT
Subject: [Baren 43599] "Charlie Overshoe"
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Message 6
From: Marilynn Smith
Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2011 16:57:24 GMT
Subject: [Baren 43600] Barbara Patera
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Message 7
From: Sharri LaPierre
Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2011 17:46:28 GMT
Subject: [Baren 43601] Re: Dedicate to Claudia
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Message 8
From: "Ellen Shipley"
Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2011 18:00:39 GMT
Subject: [Baren 43602] Re: ACEO size
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Message 9
From: "Bea Gold"
Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2011 18:15:56 GMT
Subject: [Baren 43603] Life
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Message 10
From: Louise Cass
Date: Fri, 17 Jun 2011 20:18:08 GMT
Subject: [Baren 43604] Re: Barbara Patera
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Digest Appendix
Postings made on [Baren] members' blogs
over the past 24 hours ...
Subject: Senshafuda Project - Ain't we got fun! (Part 2)
Posted by: Dave Bull
The shipping problems that I discussed yesterday were disappointing to encounter, but not something that will have too much of a long-term impact. The company that makes my shipping boxes is going to be very happy for the increased business, the purchasers less happy to pay the increased shipping charges, but we'll get through. Today's post however, is going to let you know about a situation that is going to have huge ramifications for Mokuhankan - and I'm still not sure just how I'm going to find a way through this one ... (This might get a bit long ... apologies in advance ...) Since first starting up this Mokuhankan venture a few years ago, finding printers capable of doing this work has been an exercise in frustration. The first few prints I put out were done for me by Shinkichi Numabe, who is a very skilled printer (and my age to within a couple of weeks, as it happens). He is very busy. He does all the printing for the Yoshida studio (mostly Toshi Yoshida reprints), as well as most of Paul Binnie's work (some of which are quite large). Whatever time he has left is soon taken up with whatever he wishes to choose from the general work available (mine included). Because of his high quality (and his generally low 'hunger' for money), he has all the work he can handle. I also had some work done by Shingo Ueda, who - at the time, about three years ago - was trying to establish himself as a printer for hire. Although he was nowhere near as experienced as Numabe-san, he was (is) conscientious and trustworthy, and he was able to do some editions of smaller size work to my satisfaction. But with very little interesting work coming to him from publishers (he got mostly postcard-size tourist stuff), he was forced to look around for other ways to support himself, and has since then built up a quite substantial business dealing in old books and prints (for which he has a license permitting him to participate in wholesale auctions). That business is flourishing, and he is no longer available for printing work. There are other (basically) competent printers in town, but they are not all available for hire. Major publishers such as Adachi and Watanabe have their own 'in-house' printers - salaried workers who 'go to work' in the morning at those workshops. These men do not do outside work. All that is left is the general pool of craftsmen in the 'kumiai', the traditional craftsmen's association (of which I am a member). This pool is now very small indeed, and the level of competence in the group varies very widely (as it always has) with a few people being quite skilled, and others working at a more basic level. I was lucky for the initial Senshafuda project job to be able to get Tetsui-san, the son of one of the long-time members of this association, and he has (as we have seen) turned in a good job for me. But he has been astonishingly slow, and has still not yet completed the initial batch of 200 sheets of this relatively simple project, well over a month after he actually began work. Talking to him about this, I now learn that he is not actually printing on a normal 'full-time' basis - he is a member of some kind of jazz-rock band, and spends a few days each week (mostly weekends, etc.) with them. He also works on staff at a guitar 'academy' here in Tokyo (he's in the third row of this staff list). Now I can understand this ... The job of being a woodblock printer really isn't all that interesting - when you don't have anything emotionally invested in the products themselves, as I do. And for young men such as Ueda-san and Tetsui-san (both in their 30's), the fact that you spend all day alone in your workshop means that you never get a chance to meet ... you know, girls. Both of them have mentioned this to me as a major factor in their decision to get involved with other activities, and I am in absolutely no position to criticize them for this. Young women here are in a pretty strong position these days when it comes to choosing partners, and 'traditional woodblock printer' does not even register on the list of acceptable occupations for a future husband. So ... knowing about all these things, and thinking about how to move my little business forward, I swallowed hard, and talked to one of the printers from the association. I say 'swallowed hard' because this is really not the route I want to take. These men are nearly all approaching the end of their active years (which means it's pointless to establish any kind of long-term relationship), and the fact that they are older than I makes it nearly impossible for them to take 'direction' from me. And that's exactly what happened. I certainly won't use his name here, so will simply use X-san. After he heard that I was casting around for a printer, he called (more than once) to emphasize that he was available. I had seen his work, which was only average, so was a bit hesitant, but he was very insistent, and even went so far as to jump on a train and head out here one day, calling me from the station to let me know he was in town. I decided to give it a try. I pulled some blocks out of the storeroom, sliced up some paper, and sent him off with this small test batch. Of course I gave him a sample print to follow, and the two of us went over it thoroughly before he left, discussing exactly what I wanted. But given that he is about fifteen years my senior, the conversation was not 'easy'. Remember that Japanese has 'built-in' status/position phrasing. It's very simple to speak to somebody younger and tell them what to do; it's far from simple to do it with somebody older. You can see where this is going. The samples arrived a short time ago. Here are a few images (clickable). The first is my sample - which he took with him, and (presumably) had by his side when printing: (The print is from my second Surimono Album, and as I am now down to the final few copies of my own edition of that album, I would like to prepare to release the prints individually in the Mokuhankan catalogue.) Here are three of his proofs:
[Long item has been trimmed at this point. The full blog entry can be viewed here] |
This item is taken from the blog Mokuhankan Conversations.
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Subject: Peru Day Seventeen - Looking Forward & Looking Back
Posted by: Steveke
So far the creative components of our trip have included assigned readings, blogging, and some "looking exercizes" involving drawing (thanks to Bethany for offering some practical pointers), watercolor, relief printing, and "sun printing" (a blueprint or cyanotype process -- for a mid-19th-century example see the cyanotype by Anna Atkins in the Spencer Museum of Art, 1997.0033). |
This item is taken from the blog VELOPRINT : A Journal of Printmaking and Bicycling.
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Subject: Peru Day Sixteen -- Gold Mining
Posted by: Steveke
Looking back over the past two weeks there are several topics that our group has discussed often but that we have not shared in our blog. One of these concerns our awareness of a bristling tension between ecologists, loggers and gold miners -- all of whom have strong opinions about the natural resources of the Madre de Dios region. This became very clear on our trip up the Rio Madre de Dios toward CICRA when a gold miner mooned us. We picked up our boat at Laberinto, a gold mining boom-town, and all along the Rio Madre de Dios one can see the blue tarp and bamboo lean-tos where miners have set up temporary camp while they sift the river silt in hope of finding a way out of poverty. Since we are guests in Peru we do not presume to enter into the complex political debates that churn around its remarkable rain forests, but it is clear that extensive gold mining is severely polluting the Peru?s rivers with mercury (up to 40,000 tons per year as estimated in 2009, according to the BBC, in turn quoting Peru's environmental ministry). |
This item is taken from the blog VELOPRINT : A Journal of Printmaking and Bicycling.
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