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Posts Tagged ‘Maureen Booth Print Maestra’

It’s almost as if it weren’t work at all. In theory, I’m not working any more. But printmakers and other artists keep popping up. And they are unlike “normal” people. They’re special, more interesting. They have more and different aspirations. The Spanish word is better: “inquietudes.” The young woman who has been here for the past two weeks is a perfect example. She has just graduated from a high-class American university with a dual major in Visual Arts and Cultural Anthropology. But she had virtually no experience in printmaking. We had to start from zero.

That’s not complicated. You just start at the beginning—preparing a plate—and continue through the basics. With luck, in a couple of weeks, the budding printmaker has a rough idea of making a print in various techniques and printing it in various ways. I saw a flutter of pigeons bouncing on a branch of one of our cypress trees the other day, and I stopped to try to decipher what was happening. Finally, I got the picture. It was complicated by the fact that baby pigeons, when the reach the age of leaving the nest, are roughly the same size as their mother. What I was looking at was a mother pigeon trying to get two of her offspring to leave that branch and go face the world.

That’s where my young printmaker was last week. But she was atypical from the beginning. Her plane landed in Málaga on a Sunday morning and she showed up at our house at midday after a long series of flights starting from New Orleans.  It turns out that she’s from Louisiana but she was offered a scholarship to Duke University in Durham, North Carolina. Mike, who is cheeky, said, “That’s an excellent school. What made them go all the way to Louisiana to find you? Are you brilliant, or do you just work really hard?”

“Both,” she replied matter of factly. We weren’t in a hurry that Sunday afternoon, so Rebekah had time to tell us a bit of her story. She was born in Louisiana after her family emigrated there from their pueblo in Northern Honduras. There her grandfather—and by extension her whole family—grew everything and was self sufficient, until a giant American fruit company absorbed their fincas. Instead of living off the land, the children of the family grew up to become exploited workers on pineapple plantations. “What a life your grandfather led,” I noted casually. “Is he still alive?”

“No,” said Rebekah, “He died of a heart attack, a sequel brought on by a hit-and-run incident some years earlier with a Standard Fruit Company bulldozer. It was razing fruit trees in order to open up a road across what had been his former property.”

“What a story,” I said.

“Yes,” replied Rebekah,” I hope to write it someday.”

“It would make a wonderful artist’s book,” I said, entirely spontaneously.

The following morning, Monday, we started work on Rebekah’s artist’s book. What a challenge. The book is little, but the essence is all there. Just over a week later, I asked my long-time helper, María José, to come in and help us print up a few examples of Rebekah’s book, on different papers and in different colors. It won’t be a numbered edition, as each book is different.  Each one is a monoprint with hand-written captions.  The little, accordion-style book is charming, and moving, and it taught Rebekah a lot about making prints and artist’s books. She’s taking the plates with her and can pull an edition of it whenever she likes.

And I had the privilege of accompanying an exceptional young artist on her first steps in printmaking. The talent scouts from Duke knew what they were doing in Louisiana.

Here’s Mike’s pictures:

Thanks for commenting and sharing.

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Old Dream Becomes New Reality

Laurie Teichroew, printmaker at work

A few months ago I got an email from a woman from Seattle. Farther than that, actually, four hours by ferryboat and car farther, out in the Straits of Juan de Fuca, on the Island of Lopez. Laurie Teichroew had decided she needed what she calls “a reset.” She had lived a few lifetimes already, as a mother of five beautiful children, homeschooled for seven years, and celebrated a boatload of grandchildren; worked as as a bread-maker, and a landscape designer (“I also dig.”) It was time for her to do something she had always wanted to do: art. She had done an over-all-survey-of-printmaking course in college, but it was hardly enough to base a life project on.

So she went where we always go, to Google, and typed in “printmaking course near Granada.” She has just finished a two-week, one-on-one coaching session with me in my studio. She very cleverly added a week to her stay. That gave her time to decompress after her trip from Lopez Island to Granada, and also some time for sightseeing around Granada, even to visit some friends from home who were staying on the Granada coast for a couple of years with their two children. At one point in the visit her paisana said to her, “Sometimes we wonder what would happen if we just stayed…”

Laurie’s first couple of days here, she was disoriented and uneasy. She didn’t like her sketches, nor where they were taking her. Then I saw some doodling she was doing between sketches. “What’s this?” I asked.

“Oh, that, nothing, just an impression of the towns I saw while flying over Spain in semi-darkness on the way here.”

“Why don’t you try developing that a bit?”

She was off and running, converted from a lost puppy into an alpha she-wolf in her chosen terrain. When she had a few sketches she chose the best of them and we turned them into negative solarplate prints, along with a couple of positive intaglio plates and did some interesting ghost prints. She liked the negative relief prints, and soon adopted negative solarplate as her medium of choice.  She liked it for its flexibility of treatments, its total non-toxicity and its fast results. “This is a far cry from acid etching,” she affirms, “and the results are beautiful.”

Laurie has a prodigious capacity for learning, and she had a clearly defined objective. She wanted to learn enough printmaking technique to go home, set up her own studio and start out on her new life project. She can do it. She’s got the talent, the intelligence, and the dedication. “I want to get inspired,” she said, “and to have some fun. It will be interesting to follow her progress, I think.

Her first steps were promising. She soon had a dozen or more exhibit quality prints on a selection of beautiful handmade papers and the results were impressive. Just before she left I said to her, “The first thing you have to do when you get home is to show these prints to as many people as possible. Also, if there’s something you need that you can’t afford, propose swapping it for a print or prints.”

“I’ve been a member of an artists’ association for a couple of years, and they have two or three collective show each year, said Laurie. ·But I never participated in any of them. Too shy, I guess.”

“You can forget your shyness right now,” I told her, “these prints are the work of a printmaker.”  According to Laurie, a sizeable percentage of the inhabitants of Lopez Island are artists, and she would like to be one of them. I suspect she soon will be.

“There’s a 90-year-old printmaker on the island,” says Laurie, “and I used to pester her to teach me the basics, but we never got around to it.” But I remembered an old promise I had made to myself. I would come back to Granada and study art.”

Asked, “Why did you choose Spain for this trip?” Laurie replied, “I visited Spain once before and was impressed with the southern regions, the part they call, ‘Andalucía,’ for the architecture and the gardens, the food, and what seemed to me the leisurely lifestyle.” She made her second visit to Granada’s Alhambra palace, fortress and gardens on this trip.

What’s her next step? Trying to balance work with an art project. “I’ve still got to work, and I have to set up a studio. How do I go about that? We shall see. Luckily, my kids are all grown up. And the encouragement I’ve received from you and Mike has been a big boost.

We certainly hope so, Laurie. We’ll be following your progress.

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