I’ve been waiting on paper stock supplies so that I can print from my latest collagraph plates. Having made them a bit too large for my current paper stock, I ordered further heavy weight paper from Jackson’s. This has turned up today. So tomorrow, bright and early, I shall recommence proceedings.
The following plates are what I came up with in response to the abstract brief for Part 4 of Introduction to Printmaking. My initial intention to work with the themes optimism, movement, balance, and flow have morphed into those themes surrounding COVID rules and how we have responded to them. Instead, I have created plates entitled, “community”, “containment”, “control” and “contamination”.

The above was developed from the sketch below on the facing page of my sketchbook.

My thinking behind this was about the organic nature of society and community. I likened it to the petals on a rose, only a bit more rigid in nature. The sticks are arranged sympathetically with one another to form a structure that is supportive, but also adaptable. The next plate was an attempt to create an image that depicts how it feels when patriarchal societies seek to exert control over the population.

I arranged the the above plate without prior need of sketches, as I had quite a clear idea in my mind of what effect I wished to achieve. I was pleased with the outcome below.

The enforced rigidity of the movement of the circular motifs in this print call to my mind a metaphor for limited freedoms during COVID-19 and its various strains. Whereas, the following print taken from the plate for “Containment” is less rigid in structure. It appears to exist via faith alone, as its building blocks do not adhere to the more solid rules in the print called “Control”.

The next two images are plates at various stages of completion. I need to take prints from these to determine what to add or to subtract from them to depict “Contamination” and “Community”

The above plate was inspired by the following doodle which I scrawled onto my iPad, printed off, then added to using biro and highlighter pens.

The above sketch was in turn prompted from looking at images of the Delaunay bisected concentric circles with their rich colour juxtapositions. I shall enjoy playing around with my own colour choices now that my paper has turned up.
The following is another plate – a version depicting “Connection”. Here, I have used string to form the double spiral and metal washers to ‘populate’ them. The external negative space has been textured using poly filler and sand, and by pressing corrugated card into the surface whilst not yet set to give the surface small ridges.


There is an inadvertent smiley face in this image. Appropriate or not, it is clearly visible. Perhaps re orientating it to landscape would eliminate this unfortunate effect:

The following is entitled “Contamination” to continue with the theme of how the pandemic has affected social cohesion. There is something about the way the spiral holds both the occupants and contaminants equally within its organic structure.


References:
Tate (no date) The EY Exhibition: Sonia Delaunay – Exhibition at Tate Modern, Tate. Available at: https://www.tate.org.uk/whats-on/tate-modern/exhibition/sonia-delaunay (Accessed: 14 May 2021).







