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.
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. |
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, |
Not enough ink on the Magpie. I can draw into the image with a black marker when it dries, an easy fix, |
This one is perfect, just the right amount of ink, |
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...... |