In my last post I was monoprinting mandalas with leaves then overprinting with a portrait of a scrub turkey using a polyester lithographic plate.
Over the past couple of days, I've been repeating the same sequences, but this time using a plate featuring my drawing of a magpie carolling (singing).
When magpies sing, they tilt their heads back to warble a beautiful melodious song, a long stream of musical notes like a flute, flowing up and down and around. Check out this link to some audio recordings HERE.
I wanted to capture the joy of a singing magpie in my prints, so I used a pen drawing photocopied onto a pronto polyester plate. I've used magpie imagery in my work before, but only as monoprint stencils. Using a drawing on a litho plate gives me the opportunity to inject more personality and life into my image.
The downside is that I'm not a fan of editioning - printing the same print over and over is not very exciting. I sometimes use too much ink or not enough ink. And there is a high risk of ruining a successful monoprint when I print my litho plate over the top of it.
But I love my printing, and its always my happy place even if I only get one or two successful prints after a hard day's work. All those 'not so good' prints make the successful ones even more satisfying and valuable.
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Printing the litho plate over top of the monoprint. The plate is transparent so its easy registration, I'm using scraps of paper to keep the original paper clean. |
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This one has too much ink,so the Magpie has lost the detail around his eye etc. I'll wait until it dries and try a white Posca pen on it, |
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Not enough ink on the Magpie. I can draw into the image with a black marker when it dries, an easy fix, |
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This one is perfect, just the right amount of ink, |
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This is a monoprint that went badly wrong. I put the magpie mask/stencil on the wrong side. That 'reversing of the image' printmaking rule caught me out this time. Arggghhh...... |