Ten celebrates Zea Mays' tenth anniversary, features eleven prints from faculty artists and is introduced with a topical essay by Craig Harbison, Professor Emeritus, University of Massachusetts, Amherst. The artists represented in the portfolio Ten include: Annie Bissett, Meredith Broberg, Liz Chalfin, Nancy Diessner, Anita S. Hunt, Louise Kohrman, Barry Moser, Lynn Peterfreund, Joyce Silverstone, Carol Wax and Mark Zunino.
Each print was hand-pulled by the artists and is housed in a letterpress printed folio impressed with the artist's name, the title of the print and the medium. The folios nestle in a beautiful golden silk clamshell box with a copper foil title stamp.
The letterpress was designed by Michael Russem, Kat Ran Press and printed by Art Larson, Horton Tank Graphics. The boxes were designed and made by Sarah Creighton, bookbinder.
Colophon and Credits
This portfolio celebrating the first ten years of Zea Mays Printmaking is limited in edition to twenty-five.
The prints were hand-pulled by the artists on papers of their choosing using a variety of both oil and water-based inks.
Typography and letterpress by Michael Russem at Kat Ran Press. Boxes by Sarah Creighton, bookbinder.
Ordering Information
Eight editions ofTen are available for purchase for $2500.
Inquiries:
Liz Chalfin, Director Zea Mays Printmaking 221 Pine Street, Studio 320, Florence, Massachusetts 01062 liz@zeamaysprintmaking.com 413.584.1783
Collections
Ten belongs to the following collections:
Zea Mays Printmaking Archives
The Hood Museum, Dartmouth College
The Mortimer Rare Book Room, Smith College, Northampton, MA
University of the Arts, Philadelphia, PA
The Southern Graphics Council International Archives
Yale University Art Gallery
Portland Museum of Art (Maine)
Boston Public Library
Essays
Zea Mays at Ten
Given a society that is virtually visually illiterate, an artist today faces the general problem of creating works emanating from deep personal feeling that will develop in others a visual sensitivity, allowing them to experience themselves and the world more fully. A further creative problem for contemporary printmakers involves the relatively short history of printmaking as a fine art: how to transform processes traditionally using toxic acids and grounds into something safer, greener, but still aesthetically rich and satisfying.
Zea Mays Printmaking Studio has clearly succeeded at these daunting dual tasks. This could be confirmed simply on the basis of its annual print fairs where hundreds of eager collectors spend hours trolling the bins of prints for sale. On a deeper level the achievement of artistic and economic success at Zea Mays over the past decade can be observed in its fruitful combination of strong individual creative talent alongside the spirit of the beehive, the collective environment which deeply inflects the works made there.
Cohesion at Zea Mays is first an issue of procedure. The sense of a carefully modulated graphic aesthetic of line and tone permeates the prints. The techniques employed are varied and innovative. Creativity grows from a lively exchange of new technical know-how. These printmakers gratefully recount how they first learned a technique from a colleague and go on to develop it further on their own: viscosity printing, chine collé, spit bite and acrylic aquatints, photo polymer plates, even experimenting with the traditionally safer media of drypoint, mezzotint, and relief engraving. The limits of printmaking knowledge are being extended, often through striking monoprints, while respect is still given to the roots of printmaking in a rich tradition of democratic reproductive image making.
It is the printing process itself that also fascinates and unites them, the frequently shared excitement about the inherent mystery of that practice—just what happens when a block, metal or plastic plate is manipulated, marked, inked and then pressed against a piece of paper—how thick or wet is that paper, of what color or texture? The result is akin to peeling a piece of fruit, finding the lush internal structure revealed, always unexpected and startling.
Together Zea Mays artists continue to produce art for domestic spaces without resorting to what might be called the “tourist trade” (seasonal views of the New England landscape, for instance). The local geography and culture are there in the prints in this portfolio: water, wildlife, Native Americans and corn, the sky, quiet meditation on the body, breath, on the old and the new. The imagery is visually complex and demanding, also in general intimate and integrative, seeking cohesion in the face of human frailty and perhaps even consciously in face of the destructive history of the larger world during the last ten years.
The prints in this portfolio invariably exhibit features tinged with longing, a longing embodied in a search for beauty, and, in particular, in a fascination with delicate effects of light and line as they articulate both surface and space, achieved at some point along the way by hand, by sheer physical prowess. They fly in the face of a contemporary obsession with immediate gratification. They are intent on inspiring a long and discerning look at the world around us, on teaching us what opening our eyes is all about. They represent the collective and counter-cultural hope that that need is not fleeting, not outdated, but crucial to sustaining life in a safer, greener world, however challenging that charge may be.
Craig Harbison, Professor Emeritus Art History, University of Massachusetts, Amherst