What is Autrey Art?
Random artworks by Lucy Autrey Wilson
Friday, June 20, 2014
Art is the Best Therapy - New Prints
Prints from the San Anselmo Printmakers 3rd press run. Top to Bottom:
1. Strange Journey #1 collagraph
2. Crane ghost monotype with ink and gouache
3. Blackbird ghost monotype with ink and gouache
4. Surfer monotype with gouache and watercolor
5. Blackbird in Marin monotype chine colle with gouache
6. Crane in Carmel monotype chine colle with pastel and gouache
Thursday, June 19, 2014
R.I.P. E.A. Autrey
Sunday, June 8, 2014
Bird Prints
Touched up prints from top to bottom:
Blue-crowned MotMot ghost print
Blue-crowned MotMot in ginger chine colle
Blue Parrot with Baobab trees
Blue Parrot with Baobab trees chine colle
Friday, June 6, 2014
Blue-Crowned Motmot Monotype
Best unadulterated print of mine, made during the 2nd San Anselmo Printmakers artwork day, was this blue-crowned motmot chine colle monotype. The process included an Adobe Illustrator B&W drawing, of a motmot bird collaged into a photograph of ginger, taken in Maui, then printed on Kozo paper, then glued to 100% cotton rives bfk paper, then monoprinted with akua inks and liquid pigments using a polycarbonate plate.
Monday, June 2, 2014
Helleborus
Experimenting with different techniques. This 11x15 print is an encaustic monotype with pastel and ink.
Sunday, May 25, 2014
Bird Quilt
Latest cotton quilt, measuring 47" wide x 67" high featuring wool-punched birds, free style quilting, digital blue jay photo prints on cotton percale, larger original images printed by Spoonflower, various commercial fabrics, machine stitched. Front, detail and back featured
Friday, May 23, 2014
Elsa At Goleta Beach, 1960 - Three Monotypes
Taking my Lindstrom Machinery etching press on its first run, our San Anselmo printmaking group got together to do some initial experiments with Akua intaglio inks and liquid pigments, making monotypes with polycarbonate .030 and PETG plates printing onto dry Rives BFK 100% cotton French mouldmade paper. Doing drypoint on the plastic plates didn't seem to result in strong enough line work, so I hand inked later. Damp paper would probably have worked better. The Akua liquid pigments also didn't work as well as desired either, so the prints were finished with pastels, which worked beautifully. More experimentation to come!
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