Only 3 weeks to go and I should be promoting the Fine Press Book Association fair at the Kassam Stadium Oxford, 24/25th March, but I can never stop printing long enough in my basement to enter the upstairs world of my computer…
I just had to check my catalogue entry – and it sounds rather scatty but it was just the tip of the iceberg of my thoughts when I wrote it in haste facing a large pile of woodcut blocks and texts before starting printing over two months ago.
I will elaborate here....with some roughs of a few of the images.....
These books I am printing are trying to combine being painted and printed; I always print like a painter anyway – the blocks are just another way of getting colour and image onto the paper – and each book, of a very small edition ( 7? 9? ) will be slightly different.
I want it to be quite rough and immediate, not pretty at all – I am not sure my skills stretch to tragedy so rough and raw will have to do….
James’ poem has reverted back to its original title – The Untenanted Room, after a brief sojourn as The Ruin – lucky for him I hadn’t cut the title page until very recently…
The text flickers between
current events and concerns, structured around the medieval story of Perceval,
The Holy Fool, and yes – The Ruin. I am trying to mirror the
metaphors of the writing with the way I print – shreds of allusions and
references in the imagery, cut shapes. Fragmented printing styles. The covers,
if I ever get them dry in time, are trying to gather up and meld some of the
whirling detritus of the world, both natural and man made – and compact it into
a surface; I did this once for a unique volume, The Artists Book, done
for a Millennium exhibition in 2000, which is now in the USA and I never took a
photo of the cover, so it is an idea revisited from memory nearly two decades
on.
‘Current events and
concerns’ are the perennial ones – man’s inhumanity to man and the continual
degradation of the planet. The first image is of an unspecified bombed
building, in the Middle East maybe; later bodies hang like meat from the trees,
the woodcuts try to flicker like TV screens, dead birds are strung up, trees
look blasted. But art ultimately makes things look aesthetic, cosy: I try to be
raw but pages inevitably become cooked – our conscience and consciousness makes
things acceptable so that we can carry on. I hope this is an angry book all the
same..
Alongside will be our
smaller, quieter book – Some Light Remains.
See you there hopefully.......