Lenticular
Printmaking/
HomeoStatic
Portfolio
Krause
Studio,
Marshfield
Hills,
MA.
1999
"Primordial
Fear"
35
x
28
inches
(89
x
71
cm)
© Dorothy
Simpson
Krause
1999

The
image
was
composed
from
six
scanned
objects:
a
photograph
by
Viola
Kaumlen
of
a
dramatic
sky;
a
diagram
of
Babbage's
computing
engine;
an
early
transistor;
a
photograph
by
Jan
Doucette
of
model
Linda
Serafin;
a
drawing
of
celestial
alignments
at
Stonehenge;
and
a
compass.
In
the
screen
shot
above,
the
final
image
and
all
of
the
layers
that
were
composited
to
create
it
are
visible.
For
the
lenticular
image,
the
sky
became
the
deep
background
and
Babbage's
engine
a
mid
background.
The
transistor
rose
and
set
behind
the
woman
who,
frozen
with
fear,
did
not
move.
The
compass
became
a
mask.
The
lines
of
the
azmuth
and
one
circle
from
the
Babbage
diagram
came
forward
in
the
picture
plane.
To
make
an
object
recede
in
space
it
is
moved
in
small
increments
to
the
left.
To
make
an
object
come
forward
it
is
moved
in
small
increments
to
the
right.
The
greater
the
increment
and
the
larger
the
number
of
steps,
the
more
depth
is
created.
Eight
steps
or
frames
were
saved
as
Tif
files.
The
eight
frames
were
interlaced
together
in
vertical
strips
using
the
software
program
Flip!
The
interlaced
image
was
printed
on
the
Roland
Hi
Fi
Jet
on
Roland
PETG
white
film.
Using
a
CODA
laminator,
the
print
was
laminated
to
a
plastic
40
lpi
lenticular
lens
from
MicroLens.
As
you
move
by
the
image,
you
see
one
frame
at
a
time,
which
creates
the
illusion
of
depth
and
movement.
Primordial
Fear
was
also
used
to
make
a
hand-pulled
print
for
a
USF
exchange
portfolio,
HomeoStatic, "the
dynamic
equilibrium
of
man
and
technology
in
the
digital
age",
organized
by
Brad
Shanks.
The
Photoshop
layers
were
flattened
and
the
resulting
image
was
sized
to
15" x
11",
flipped
horizontally
and
printed
on
the
Roland
HI
Fi
Jet
on
domestic
PETG
white
film.
A
sheet
of
handmade
lama-li
paper
from
Nepal
was
misted
and
blotted.
The
print
was
centered
on
the
paper
face
down
and
transferred
using
the
CODA
laminator
as
a
monoprint
press.
When
the
white
film
was
pulled
from
the
damp
paper,
the
image
remained.
The
transferred
print,
encapsulated
in
ink
jet
receiver,
sits
on
the
surface
of
the
paper
similar
to
an
emulsion
transfer.
The
20" x
16" digital
transfer
print
is
an
edition
of
34
with
6
artist
proofs.