Workshop fee: $65,00
All supplies included and light refreshments provided.
History of the technique
In 1915 a group of 6 women artists decided to spend their winter in the summer resort town of Provincetown, Massachusetts to work on a new printmaking technique. These women were all Japanese Wood cut Printmakers; a technique that uses separate plates for each color in the composition. These artists wanted to invent something that looked similar but used one plate versus many. White line printmaking was developed from this collaboration and is popular in the US today.
The method utilizes a soft wood block as the printing plate. The image is transferred to the wood then each line is cut with a craft knife, making V-lines that appear as white lines in the finished product. The paper is tacked to the top of the wood plate with thumb tacks to create a perfect registration, making sure the paper falls in the exact same place each time.
Using watercolor onto the wood plate in one small area at a time, then folding the paper over and burnishing the back of the paper with a silver spoon, repeating the process until the print is complete.
White-line woodblock printmaking is the first printmaking technique unique to the United States.
Join this exciting 5-hour workshop with WADA studio artist, Denise Cormier Mahoney!
Denise Cormier Mahoney
National Assoc. of Women Artists- Signature Member
NAWA Florida Chapter President
dcmstudios.org
www.facebook.com/denisecormiermahoneystudios/
https://www.instagram.com/dcmahoneyart/
727-256-0821 | info@wadastpete.org
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