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You are here: Home / Archives for painting with light

Three Days in the Sun: Cyanotype Workshop at The Stables

July 29, 2012 by Iskra 9 Comments

Cyanotype_At_The_Stables
© Iskra Johnson

The Stables is the quietest place I have ever been. You can hear a twig drop in the woods, and a horse eating a buttercup. In between, complete, breathtaking stillness. Situated high on the southwest side of Orcas Island, this 25-acre ranch and creative compound hosts workshops in a variety of arts and crafts taught by the resident artists and invited guests. The simultaneous sense of vista and retreat makes for a very special place for art and reflection.

This July I signed on with my sister, Cassandra, and 17-yearold niece Zoë for a three-day workshop in cyanotype. My sister and I had spent early years growing up on a ranch, and to be together quite literally in a stables, sleeping in a loft above, sent us both into states of unexpected recollection. Every morning we looked out on two chestnut horses and followed their graceful ambulations across the pasture. The tooled leather and haymow, the 4-H, the riding rink, the coyotes under the moon and the back forty of our pasts tumbled into the present everywhere we turned. My niece, not yet of an age for elegies, lovely in pigtails and grave and hilarious by turns, focused on her senior year project in all things photographic. She proceeded to make one artlessly perfect composition after another. Note to self: make no helpful design suggestions when a true artistic gift is at hand.

ZoeTwoCyanotypesOneWithTea-Bath
Two of Zoë’s Prints, the lower one has been toned with tea

I had planned originally to work with my existing themes of architectural photography, and had spent days making negatives. At the last minute I threw two birdcages in the car. This turned out to be a very good idea. Within hours on the first day I could see that this process of cyanotype is an alive thing, a way to paint with the sun and your surroundings, an opportunity to toss out your preconceptions and open the door to the unexpected. Noted Seattle artist and cyanotype expert David Simpson taught us, and nudged and pushed us through three days of testing our limits. Although he had encouraged us to bring objects we also used what we found on site: crumpled wire, thistles, chainsaws, daisies, ferns. We laid these things on glass or directly on coated paper. Our fourth workshop member, printmaker Lynda Swenson, experimented with printing on maps and existing etchings and woodcuts.

Cassandra_Cyanotypes_On_Various_Papers
Some of Cassandra’s prints.

Upper right brown and black print shows how fabulously the Artistico works with tannic acid toning. Below, a composition with three dimensional blocks and pearls, testing cropping. The actual print is not this yellow. The photo was taken with warm light from the walls of the stables reflecting onto the surface. I would love a skirt with this printed on it!

Cassandra_Cyanotype_With_Pearls

Close-up_of_Linda_Swenson's_cyanotype_on_a_Map
Close-up of Lynda Swenson’s cyanotype on a map

In the first step we coated our paper with solution in a darkened stable under a red safe-light. When ready we dashed from the darkroom to the outside laboratory where we slid the paper under existing arrangements or began lightning fast compositions, lifting or placing objects for different effects. We all had various timing devices, and at times it looked like a circus casino, or perhaps a camp for people with attention deficit disorder. We rushed in and out of the barn, lifted and placed objects, stared at our paper variously counting outloud, watching a cellphone or a wristwatch, or drifting into conversation — “What minute was I on???” And then (this was the best part) we threw the paper into a kiddie wading pool to fix and finish developing.

Art_In_The_Pool_Fixing_a_Cyanotype
Just accept the octopus into your heart…and agitate carefully to avoid the dreaded water bubble spots–they cannot be removed.

Some things I learned:

  1. Paper: Although many sites recommend Stonehenge as an ideal paper I would like to sell you a bridge to nowhere. I have fifty sheets of this stuff and we universally loathed it. No depth. A pale obnoxious blue. Also no watermark and cheap—what was I thinking??
  2. Rives BFK takes on odd shades of brown under some circumstances, which sometimes adds a pleasing element. The cyanotype solution tends to bead up and it is very hard to know if you have the edges of your paper covered in the semi dark.
  3. 400 pound Strathmore rag bristol mottles. It also can delaminate in the bath. But, you can then recoat the separated sheets and use the mottled tints as background to create lovely new images. Some of my sister’s best pieces were created this way. They have a wonderful vintage quality and tonal depth.
  4. Fabriano Artistico hotpress provides phenomenal fine grained exposures and takes toning elegantly, you can created a black and brown duotone with crisp luminous whites. I wish I had bought fifty sheets of THIS. Rives worked best with the few photo negatives I tried. I did test strips, and timing through clamped glass was one half to one third of that needed for objects (ie. For negatives, an average of four minutes in hot July sun.)
  5. Water: The Orcas water comes from a well and has minerals in it. This may be why certain prints took an amber cast after several coatings. Cyanotype is the art of variables. Washing and fixing prints in city water with chlorine could lead to completely different results. I had mysterious perfectly round spots on my first three or four prints, which appeared only after the water bath. It took a lot of detective work, but we finally figured out that it was bubbles formed by not immersing the paper fast enough and completely enough—and do immerse the paper face down.
  6. Adding peroxide to the water bath: you get blazing blues. We didn’t test definitively enough to know if the blues lasted and were as dark or darker than cured prints, but we decided it might be kind of a cheap trick.
  7. Time: Make no final decision on anything until prints have dried and oxidized for at least 24 hours. They can darken drastically.
  8. Random magic: Yes, you can expose while paper is still wet, and it leads to beautiful effects like watercolor. You can also paint with solution under the sun. The solution will change and change as you paint, losing potency as it is exposed. There is absolutely no need to take a meditation workshop or study impermanence with a master from the East. Just pour cyanotype onto paper under the sun and spend some days watching it dry. Change is the only constant.
Painting_With_Light_Cyanotype_Experiment
Painting with light, cyanotype experiment

Above, a piece in progress. I painted under bright sun, adding new solution. As it dried it turned strange shades of rust and pink and two new shades of blue I hadn’t seen before. Then it all disappeared in the wading pool and became something else.

One of the most promising experiments I did involved folding paper while it was wet. I do wish I had figured out the cause of the mysterious round spots before I did “Origami Cage”, but I am including it here because I think it’s interesting. I can’t tell you how great it felt to completely beat up a piece of paper. When I wake up in the morning one of the first things I see when the sun is out is the shadow of birdcages cast onto the wall. I have tried off and on for ten years to capture them in some way. I think they finally found their home.

Bird_Cage_One_Cyanotype
Bird Cage 1, 16″ x 22″, Cyanotype on Fabriano Artistico © Iskra Johnson
TiltedCageCyanotype
Tilted, 22″ x 16″, Cyanotype on Fabriano Artistico, © Iskra Johnson
Bird_Cage_Cyanotype_2
The Cloud, 22″ x 16″, Cyanotype on Fabriano Artisitico, © Iskra Johnson

Architectural-CyanotypeDetail

Origami_Cage_Cyanotype
Origami Cage, 16″ x 20″ Cyanotype on folded Rives BFK
Deconstruction1_Cyanotype
Deconstruction, 17″ x 23″, Cyanotype on Fabriano Artistico, © Iskra Johnson

And, a couple of links. You can find out everything you ever want to know about cyanotype and alternative processes at Alternative Photography.com. And don’t miss David Simpson’s work at Photographic Wanderings at Lisa Harris Gallery opening August 2.

Filed Under: Photography Tagged With: alternative photography techniques, best papers for cyanotype, composing with objects, cyanotype workshop, Dvid Simpson, painting with light, The Stables on Orcas Island

Light Study with Wheels

August 27, 2009 by Iskra Leave a Comment

Light_Study_With_Wheels
© Iskra Johnson

The light is so brief in the Northwest. I feel panicked to capture it and keep it and put it in a bottle up high in the window where I can see it every day. Transfer print with water color 14 x 20 inches.

Filed Under: Transfer Prints Tagged With: bicycle in summer, light in a bottle. light study, painting with light

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Today’s mood, from the morning walk. Today’s mood, from the morning walk.
A metaphysical idea waiting to become a drawing. A A metaphysical idea waiting to become a drawing. All day I have been studying graphite, the most evanescent of mediums. Fragility. Once you break the egg, scatter the nest, leave the children without family on an abandoned beach, what then? 

I have spent the day drawing. In the background, which becomes foreground with one click, is the news of the rounding up of another thousand or so human beings by bounty hunters given a quota, thrown into concrete cages and disappeared because someone decided that America is no longer the home of the #huddledmasses.

The plaque on the Statue of Liberty says:

“Here at our sea-washed, sunset gates shall stand
A mighty woman with a torch, whose flame
Is the imprisoned lightning, and her name
Mother of Exiles. From her beacon-hand
Glows world-wide welcome; her mild eyes command
The air-bridged harbor that twin cities frame.
“Keep, ancient lands, your storied pomp!” cries she
With silent lips. “Give me your tired, your poor,
Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free,
The wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me,
I lift my lamp beside the golden door!”

Noem and Holman have not, apparently, run their hands over these words.

How do you continue making art at a time like this? You chase the metaphor. There is always a constant truth beneath the chaos.
Media studies. Addition and subtraction. Media studies. Addition and subtraction.
Somehow, between checking the news and the usual d Somehow, between checking the news and the usual distractions I managed to complete a drawing. Going back to the beginning: drawings in dust. 9.5 x 12” Charcoal powder, compressed charcoal, charcoal pencil on Moleskine. I feel peaceful for the first time in weeks.
The train tracks that go along Golden Gardens and The train tracks that go along Golden Gardens and pause briefly at the locks create a rupture in the city landscape. When the trains go by, the roar and squeal is like a thousand wild animals let out of their cage, and the ducks in the pond at the edge of the park shudder and dive under the water. A little farther north at Carkeek there is someone every year who steps in front of the train and whoever witnesses that is never the same. 

Sometimes the cargo containers are filled with coal, uncovered, and I have been part of demonstrations, which included polar bears and Orcas, objecting to that. Now, as we are being asked to casually accept nuclear reactors on every block as the price of having artificial intelligence, coal and its simple visible dust might look a little more friendly. The train brings with it economics and politics and life and death and class and all the people on the beach are just trying to have a moment in the sun. And the boaters at the marina, if they have finished polishing and descaling and mending the sails are lying back with a guitar and getting lost in the mountains. If you are willing to live right next to the train tracks, you can pay a much lower price for your home, but your dreams will change. I have lived next to the train tracks when I was very, very small and every night I woke up screaming and ran across the floor in the beams of the streetlight looking for safety. I have woken up in a train yard on a bed of cardboard and gotten on the train in the dark. Only when you do that, do you know just how hard metal is.

I’ve been drawing recently from life and this study was done from a photograph. It drove me crazy trying to see details that I couldn’t really see and feel them with the pencil. I’ve abandoned the drawing for now, but I learned a great deal about perseverance and obliteration and re-perseverance. Also how machines pretend that they are perfectly symmetrical and are not. And when you don’t draw them with perfection, they look just plain wrong so you have to make them more perfect than they are, at least when they are in perspective.
Tonight’s abandoned bird. The next one will be bet Tonight’s abandoned bird. The next one will be better. I’ve never tried to draw a Robin before. I’ve been obsessed with them since David Lynch sent them over to my childhood house, where they spent day and night getting drunk on the holly berries outside the kitchen window. And if you don’t know what I’m talking about google Laura Dern, Blue Velvet. And the Robin. It’s a hymnal to the good and the normal, done absolutely abnormally. I am learning all kinds of amazing things about how Robins build their nests. They start with mud. I did not know this. And in a drought, they will drag straw into a birdbath to get it wet and then drag the straw over a wormhole. Robins build their nests in the most unlikely places: drain spouts, highway overpasses, really bad motel parking lots. It’s kind of like how people find third place in community, even in the bleakest places. A franchise McDonald’s where people become regulars and always get the fries and just the fries because that’s all they can afford is a similar statement of naive valor: people talking to strangers and becoming known and taking shelter where they can. And if they leave a shredded napkin out there by their car, it will end up woven in with the straw and the leaves and the cigarette butts perched up there in the nest on the backside of the billboard.

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