10: Jim Dine one of the most important artists working today, a prolific and unparalleled printmaker, whose iconic images are internationally renowned.
The tenth episode of Making a Mark explores Jim Dine’s (b. 1935) lifelong relationship with hand-tools. Tools have been a constant for the artist, not only as implements used to mark his plates and blocks, but also as ‘objects of desire,’ appearing as subject matter in his art for over six decades.
We meet Jim Dine in his studio in Paris, where he discusses the first print he ever made aged 17 years old in his grandfather’s basement using a piece of wood and chisel. From tracing his early interactions with tools, to introducing new monumental woodcut prints depicting hammers, Dine also talks about the various printers he has worked with including the late Aldo Crommelynck and Kurt Zein.
Contributors include master printer Julia D’Amario, an etching printer who has worked with Dine since the 1990s, and gallery founder and co-director Alan Cristea, who describes the works and ideas of an artist that he first met 45 years ago and whose achievements in printmaking remain unparalleled today.
Presented by writer and critic, Charlotte Mullins.
Artworks discussed in the episode can be viewed online via https://cristearoberts.com/podcast/
Photo: Daniel Clarke
#jimdine #americanartist #handtools #printmaking #worksonpaper #workonpaper #painting #drawing #woodcutprint #artiststudio #printstudio #makingamark #talkart #artpodcast
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9: Ian Davenport: One of Britain’s foremost contemporary artists whose practice delves into the realms of colour, process and materiality.
This episode of Making a Mark explores works on paper by Ian Davenport (b.1966), one of Britain’s foremost contemporary artists whose practice delves into the realms of colour, process and materiality.
We meet Davenport, well known for his abstract paintings, in his studio in South London to find out more about what inspires him, from art history to contemporary music, and how he creates his works on paper and prints, some measuring over three metres in length and made up of as many as forty different colours.
Discover Davenport’s artistic evolution as one of the generation of Young British Artists, whose work is now collected worldwide. Set to a soundtrack featuring the artist’s drumming, we also hear from curator and writer Jonathan Watkins who staged Davenport’s first institutional show in the UK in 2004. Gallery co-director David Cleaton-Roberts, who has worked with Davenport for over twenty years, describes the complex printing techniques the artist employs to create mesmerising colour arrangements.
Presented by writer and critic, Charlotte Mullins.
Making a Mark is a podcast by Cristea Roberts Gallery exploring the relationship between artists and printmaking.
Artworks discussed in the episode can be viewed online via https://cristearoberts.com/podcast/
Photo: Ian Davenport Studio
#iandavenport #printmaking #silkscreen #screenprint #worksonpaper #workonpaper #painting #drawing #interactionofcolor #josefalbers #yba #turnerprize #makingamark #talkart #artpodcast #artiststudio
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8: Clare Woods: One of the most important British artists working today on her evolving practice and the tension that runs through works bursting with colour
7: Yinka Shonibare CBE: A globally celebrated artist on race, class, and constructions of cultural identity
This episode of Making a Mark explores the printmaking practice of Yinka Shonibare CBE (b. 1962), a globally celebrated artist whose work examines race, class, and constructions of cultural identity.
We meet Shonibare in his busy East London studio, surrounded by his prints and rolls upon rolls of Batik fabric, a symbolic and distinct feature of the artist’s work. Listen in as Shonibare explains why this fabric has become a recurrent motif for everything he wants to say about identity, politics, colonialism, and postcolonialism.
Shonibare discusses how in recent years he has returned to two-dimensional work in the form of printmaking. Find out about the complex way he makes his woodblock prints and about his subject matter, including how the election of Donald Trump informed his first ever print project with Cristea Roberts Gallery and how the imagery of a large-scale print made in response to the Black Lives Matter movement in 2020, was born from a rejected commission, deemed too controversial.
We also find out why in his recent prints, Shonibare has chosen to illustrate the radical influence of African artefacts on the work of western modernists, from Picasso, Derain, Modigliani, Matisse to Man Ray and his fellow artists in the Dada and Surrealist movements.
Contributors include gallery director, David Cleaton-Roberts and curator, writer and broadcaster Ekow Eshun. Presented by writer and critic, Charlotte Mullins.
Click here to purchase a book featuring an interview between Yinka Shonibare CBE and Charlotte Mullins.
Making a Mark is a podcast by Cristea Roberts Gallery exploring the relationship between artists and printmaking.
Artworks discussed in the episode can be viewed online via https://cristearoberts.com/podcast/
Photo: Leon Foggitt
#yinkashonibare #ekoweshun #printmaking #printstudio #artiststudio #woodblock #africanmodernism #africanart #donaldtrump #blm #blmmovement #britishempire #colonialism #culturalidentity
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6: Joe Tilson: One of Britain's most important living artists, a founding figure of British Pop Art and ground-breaking printmaker
The sixth episode of Making a Mark explores the life and work of one of Britain’s most important living artists, Joe Tilson (b. 1928), and the continued centrality of printmaking to his practice.
As a lifelong dedicated and subversive printmaker, we meet Tilson in his London studio on the eve of his 94th birthday, to discuss the preoccupations, inspirations, philosophy, and methods, that have been the focus of his graphic works for over half a century. From prints made in the 1960s by Tilson, then an exponent of British Pop Art, to new hand-coloured editions, inspired by cultural history, we explore how Tilson continues to defy and challenge the rule book of printmaking.
Contributors include gallery founder and director Alan Cristea, who has worked with Tilson since 1969; interior designer, founder and creative director of Firmdale Hotels, Kit Kemp, who collects Tilson’s prints and art historian, writer and curator Marco Livingstone, who has authored a new biography about Tilson, launching in May 2023.
Presented by writer and critic, Charlotte Mullins.
This podcast episode coincides with the exhibition Joe Tilson: Breaking the Rules at Cristea Roberts Gallery (28 April – 17 June 2023).
Making a Mark is a podcast by Cristea Roberts Gallery exploring the relationship between artists and printmaking.
Artworks discussed in the episode can be viewed online via https://cristearoberts.com/podcast/
#joetilson #printmaking #silkscreen #screenprint #worksonpaper #workonpaper #painting #popart #britishpopart #britishart #britishartists #modernbritishart #contemporaryart