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MARY MARK &
DAVID JOHNSON
ARTISTS STATEMENT
This mixed media collaboration has emerged over time from
the fine art of Mary Mark and the dedication of Mary Mark, David Johnson
and Lost Steeple Originals, their studio, to the values and life style
of the American arts and crafts movement. They share with that movement
a cultural emphasis on the creation of fine arts crafted by hand from
indigenous materials at prices affordable to all. Ms. Mark’s artistic
vision has also emerged from the 19th & 20th
century arts and crafts movement with its pre-Raphaelite influences. Mix
together the funky perspectives of Cezanne, the saturated colors of
Matisse, the stylized botanicals of William Morris merge these into the
expressive black line of Munch and Baskin; next add David’s wood working
skills uniting the design of the image into the finished framing; lastly
add a peppering of the irreverent attitude of Picasso and the
determination and self contained feminism of Georgia O’Keefe; and that
unique palette that is Mary Mark’s distinctive artistry becomes a full
arts and crafts collaboration. |
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All of the frames are hand made, joined from raw wood
mouldings often poplar cut to David’s profile designs by a local mill
shop. The finishes are made from a variety of sources, from aniline dyes
to composite gilts to acrylic paint. They are created piece by piece to
match the individual artworks and are all hand applied in LSO’s studios.
The matting and mounting is all archival and of museum quality. The
enhancements are acrylic and sealed by the finishes.
The expression of Mary’s reduction block prints must by
necessity include the revival of traditional craft. The demands and
limitations of the reduction linoblock process both retard and advance
the development of the final image. Printmaking entails not just the
making of a work of fine art, but he making of an intermediary work of
art, the matrix, which in turn will make the art. The message of layered
color, perspective and concentrated design elements of the image emerges
from a thousand cuts of the block and multiple printings of the paper.
The recarving and reprinting of the block with as many as 20 colors
inevitably lead to its self-destruction. The image registration on the
paper must endure the press’ pressure for those 20 reprintings along
with climate variations over the printing period and yet register the
detailed image to the last color. The palette of over printed
semi-transparent inks must be controlled to produce the compositional
intention and the proper pressure balance across the face of the plate
in order not to irregularly stretch the paper. The engineering and
artistic challenge subjugates the manufacture of the matrix as the final
image emerges from the process in spite of its limits. It is the fine
art of Mary Mark inside the hand crafted quality and finishing eye of
David Johnson.
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