Title: Sarah Reclining (bijin aizuri-e)
Size: 16" x 22"
Date: August, 2003
Medium: woodblock print (water based pigments) on washi
My primary model for almost a decade, Sarah had fallen asleep while
modeling for this print. To me, her relaxed posture and features
were so beautiful!
"Bijin" is a Japanese word which means "beautiful
woman." "Aizuri-e" means "blue picture."
Subject, color, and technique are traditional mid-19th Century Japanese,
but the realistic image, composition, and the reduction carving
of the block are quite Western. This print is a reduction woodcut,
carved and printed entirely by hand using traditional Japanese woodblock
printing techniques and materials (except, of course, for the reduction
part).
Traditionally, each of the eighteen blocks for this print would
have been carved by hand from separate pieces of wood. In order
to save time and materials (but at increased risk), I carved only
a single block laminated from three narrower planks of cherry wood.
I like that you can still see the grain of the wood and a joinery
seam in the finished print. For the various shades of blue which
make up the colors in this print, I'd carve a bit, print each sheet,
carve a bit more, print each sheet again a bit darker, etc. –
eighteen times! Although I printed forty sheets, the damp paper
sagged so much during printing that half wound up with ink blotches.
Only twenty sheets could be editioned. |