Right On

About Monoprints: The process of creating monoprints is not inherently complicated: create a matrix, apply ink, place paper, press. Early forays into the technique were made in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, but it was not until the 1700s that William Blake began experimenting with what we would now recognize as monotypes. Thereafter, various monoprinting methods were developed and utilized by the likes of Edgar Degas, Camille Pissarro, and Paul Gaugin; later, Chagall, Miró, and Picasso would seize upon the technique.

Mel Bochner’s monoprints – immediately identifiable for their texture, text, and arresting color composition - are a bit more complicated, and a bit more unpredictable. His works have “immense visual variety” – though each series of monoprints is created using a single matrix, the variables [color spectrum, color density, size, etc.] can be endlessly manipulated. Though each piece is created with this single matrix, each piece is unique.

This variety results from a host of variables: the medium used (oil paints altered with different oils and varnishes), the viscosity of the paints, color placement (determined by Bochner and sometimes – in an effort to quell his inherent color biases – the printer), and the paper itself. (The paper is handmade and multi-layered, resulting in stark levels of differentiation once the paint is applied.) The incalculability of these variables and the skill of the artist and Two Palms (his printer) result in works that are striking for their brilliance and for their contrast.

 

Year: 2023
Medium: Monoprint in oil with collage, engraving, and embossment on handmade paper
Signed and dated in graphite on verso
Size: 32.375 x 62.625 in (82.2 x 159.1 cm)
Frame size: 36.5 x 67 in (92.7 x 170.1 cm)
Provenance: From the printer, Two Palms, to Long-Sharp Gallery