Experimental
Printmaking Process: Custom Substrate
Krause
Studio,
Marshfield
Hills,
MA.
2000
"Flint"
28 x
35 inches (71 x 89 cm)
© Dorothy
Simpson
Krause
2000
In the fall
of 1998 I spent two weeks in Tibet. I bought a large book of handmade
paper in Nepal to record my impressions and make collages from materials
gathered along the way. I also took hundreds of photographs. I spent
all of 1999 trying unsuccessfully to sort through the emotional impact
and to capture the spirit of Tibet. It was only when I tore the pages
from the journal, obliterated the writing and rubbed out much of what
had been done that the work began to reflect the experience. Many layers
of encaustic and oils gave the effect of yak butter and smoke; a deep
glow beneath decay and destruction. When the collages were complete,
they were scanned and combined with the photographs in Photoshop.
To give the
same kind of texture to the final print, I spread a skim coat of Golden
Molding Paste onto a piece of dimensionally stable spunbonded polyster.
When it dried, I painted the surface with a coat of gel medium mixed
with pearlescent powdered pigment. The final twp coatings were of rabbit-skin
glue to provide a receiver for the inks. To insure that the print heads
wouldn't hit on the surface, I put the substrate through the CODA laminator
under pressure. The final print was made on the Roland Hi-Fi JET printer
with their pigmented YMCLmLc ink set.