Hand-pulled

Scale Sketch for "Over..." Project by Joe Olney

IMG_0108IMG_0111IMG_0109 IMG_0112 Over...(scale sketch)  screen print on four papers 396x54 (dimensions will vary)

This is a sketch of the Over... Project that I've been working on. The size of the tags are to scale. However, the overall shape of the piece and spacing of the tags may change. At least this roughly gives a sense of the area that I'm working with. I just couldn't see in my mind what 5,000 dog tags would look like, so I burned a screen and got to work pulling prints. I've ordered about half of the dog tags and the wire that they will hang from. So when they come in I'll have a better idea of what this piece will end up looking like.

I had originally intended to put this on a much taller, vertically-oriented wall (which would have changed it's proportions to something more like 5/6), but it's good to see on a wall like this because finding tall walls (30 feet or so)  has been difficult. I may have to modify ...Over to the space(s) it ends up in.

In my critique, the possibility of this becoming a traveling exhibit came up. I like that idea. There was also a suggestion that it might change from site-to-site. I like that, too.

Lid by Joe Olney

Lid intaglio 3.5 x 7 (image size) 17.5 x 11 (paper)

Last semester's etching class allowed me to further concentrate on my experiences in Iraq. The class was geared more towards process and less about getting perfect editions so that we could see how an image evolved on the plate as we worked it. My most recent paintings have been executed in a somewhat similar fashion in that they begin as one thing and become something else. And what results hopefully has just as much to do with a sensibility that I'm trying to get across as the imagery itself. Lately I've been giving more thought as to why, exactly why, we feel one way or another when we look at an image. I've also started to question whether it's necessary at all for me to have anything recognizable in the work in order to have a conversation with the viewer. But I'll have more on that in later posts. Initially this piece was an image of a retransmission base on Sinjar Mountain, but at the end the image became something else entirely. I called it Lid because that's what came to mind as I worked on the plate. It seemed that as I took chances with the plate, the image informed me that it could be something other than what I was shooting for in the first place. So the image changed and I went with it, but to me it retained the sensibility that I was going for. Anyway, I won't try to taint anyone else's interpretation of what it is about to me by explaining further. I think you get the gist. Below are images of how the plate evolved.

Etching by Joe Olney

Thank you for not praying etching and drypoint on paper 9x12

A print I did for the etching portion of my printmaking materials class. It's somewhat related to an article I read about how many hotels were removing the Gideons bibles from their roooms. It's interesting to think what might happen to hotels without bibles. Would all the meth lab rats, lustful adulterers, rowdy rock stars, and slithering prostitutes and their johns no longer frequent these foresaken establishments now that the bibles are no longer there? And without all of that activity, would these places slowly wither away, soulless and forgotten? Well, maybe not, but food for thought.

Oil and Turbines by Joe Olney

Oil and Turbines linocut reduction relief print 7.5 x 11 $50 ea.

For our final project in printmaking we had to create an image that dealt with the themes land, sea, or air. I chose sea and wanted to do something pertaining to a current event either in my personal life or in the news. So after wrestling with an image (I went through several), I ended up with this one. And obviously it's about what's going on in the Gulf of Mexico. It looks like despite our best efforts that mess will take a very long time to clean up, and many aspects of coastal and ocean life, both natural and human-related will be greatly affected.

Sultry by Joe Olney

Sultry lino cut 8x10 $45 ea.

Here's another print. This was a collaborative project where the drama department gave us a written description of an unidentified character's body position and we had to interpret it and put it into a context of our choice using a linoleum block print.

binding ties by Joe Olney

binding ties monoprint 20.75x15.75

The following four posts are pieces I made in my printmaking class. Just about everything we've done has been a big departure from my usual mode of image making. I am very much a planner, and so I generally do not embrace spontinaeity until after I have a compositional structure in mind. Very rarely are my paintings and drawings done on the fly. However, in my printmaking class, we are encouraged to build the image as we lay the different elements down. Although this process has caused me some frustration at times, letting go of that control and working as you go can bring about some interesting results that may have otherwise not been produced. In most of these prints, risks were taken that would have been avoided had I planned it out. Some of them have some craftsmanship issues such as improper registration and variable clarity in the pronto plate pieces, but for the most part I like them. I think breaking from the norm is a good way for me to push myself (and be pushed) in order to see different ways of making work and solving the various problems that come along.