Oriel x Origine / summer Peony print / EPC 28
Print Club, Works on Paper, Shimano Fuji, Garden, All Posts Chuck Elliott Print Club, Works on Paper, Shimano Fuji, Garden, All Posts Chuck Elliott

Oriel x Origine / summer Peony print / EPC 28

I’ve been working on a new piece for the Experimental Print Club, I hope you like it when you see it. There’s a continuing interest in the idea of combining the maths and geometry of nature and the wider world with my print work. It’s an ongoing thought process about how to make work both inside and outside the studio, and see if the garden can directly influence what happens here on the system. In many ways the garden can be seen as a kind of miniature eden, albeit a chaotic one, but perhaps that is the point. As you’ll know, I don’t have any particular faith in a specific religion, but there is something absolutely magical about what happens here each year as the seasons pass, and the plants grow, flower and fade back.

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Print Club News / Summer 2024

Print Club News / Summer 2024

I have two small Photopolymer plates that I’m working with. Both are looking very promising I think. There’s a lot to learn here, but in essence I think I can pull off two short editions from these studies, and send them out to you as Print Club editions.

I’m interested to use the Chine Collé technique with both. I’ve bought some Kozo paper, from Intaglio Printmakers in Southwark which I visited a few weeks back, and a beautiful Japanese Hake brush to apply the glue. Chine Collé involves adding a thin layer of tinted paper between the inked plate and the base paper, effectively creating a tinted look to the artwork that brings it into sharp relief on the base sheet, which in this case will be Somerset. So it’s really all about finding a couple of uninterrupted days to master the editioning. How hard can that be!

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Print Club News / May 2024

Print Club News / May 2024

I’m minded to write a little more personally here than I perhaps have before, and continue in that direction over the coming years. As I get older, it seems to me that the personal is blending with the professional, into some kind of singular existence that blends the art I make with my day to day life, in ways that become ever more inseparable. I recently heard success described as the ability to simply keep doing what you do each day, that success lies within the activity itself, not the outcome. That resonated with me!

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Print Club News / March 2024
Print Club, Garden, Lino, All Posts Chuck Elliott Print Club, Garden, Lino, All Posts Chuck Elliott

Print Club News / March 2024

Having been a Print Club member for a while now you’ll already know that I’m a keen gardener, I love the opportunity to spend a little time outdoors each day as the year warms up. We’ve reached the point in the cycle where everything is growing fast, shoots and weeds, trees coming into leaf and bulbs appearing from the soil. It’s a beautiful moment, and one which I always greet by trying to get an hour outside first thing in the morning, at least three or four times each week if possible, before settling into my studio for the day.

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Rock / Singularity / EPC edition #25

Rock / Singularity / EPC edition #25

Rock singularity is the latest work for my Experimental Print Club, and also a component of the work I’ve been making during my residency at the Centre for Print Research at UWE, here in Bristol.

I’ve been building a new kiln fired glass sculpture - Vessel, a reliquary for the Holocene - and as part of that work I wanted to create some form of base component to ground the modular sculpture.

So I thought it would be fitting to choose a rock from my own locality, my garden, and use it as a part of the support for Vessel. There’s a whole load of thinking there about the rock as a barren, weathered surface, and the reliquary that contains the germ of a seed being planted on it.

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Notes from a locked down studio
Print Club, Garden, All Posts Chuck Elliott Print Club, Garden, All Posts Chuck Elliott

Notes from a locked down studio

Where to start!? It seems like a long time ago that we were locked down in response to the Coronavirus, and I have to say that at the beginning of the process I rather assumed that it would be the end of the studio as I’ve known it over the past 25 years. The strong sense of an impending recession, coming hot on the heels of austerity and Brexit, seemed to me to sound a death knell for artists working with high street galleries as their primary source of income. Inevitably I retreated to my garden to think, and to labour. The simple task of tending the garden in Spring is a fantastic tonic, and of course, allows one to think and reflect at some length.

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