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Anna Church - "Less Noise Please", January 2021 issue
A sampled selection of images and video from Anna Church’s creation and contemplation of Less Noise Please. In development of this work, the first of a new series and direction in her sculptography practice, Anna committed herself to an exploration of the achromatic colour white, with all of the textured, minute hue variances, and stillness potential it may have the power to evoke.
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Micah Adams - "Caribou/hare" April 2021 issue
We’ve been busy in Smokestack’s Analog studio preparing the plates for Micah’s upcoming Smokestack Quarterly print release. These plates for Micah’s copperplate etching have been hand-finished to a mirror smoothness before a layer of waxy acid-resist was melted and applied to the surface; a process known as Hard Ground etching. Once coated, Micah completed an initial layer of drawing on the plate for a preliminary etch to establish the image ahead of subsequent stages of coating and etching. Stage-by-stage, the image will become more resolved, revealing the richness of the copperplate etching. When complete, the plate will be inked and hand-printed.
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Hand Printing Micah Adam's Etching
The result! Micah Adam’s “Caribou/hare” captured here in its final pull from the press! A new foray for the artist, this etching presented another unique way for Micah to mine the overlooked intricacies of coin design to create a new kind of exciting intervention.
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Behind the camera with Shellie Zhang
With this work, multidisciplinary artist Shellie Zhang created a new digital photographic print that continues her responsive approach to the still life genre. “A Trip to the Store” was conceived as a portrait or ‘snapshot’ of Toronto’s Parkdale neighbourhood in the summertime – all items in the composition were sourced from those shops and experiences had in this area where she lives and works.
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In the Smokestack Analog Studio with Mariel Rutherford
Hamilton based artist and illustrator, Mariel Rutherford, is one of the artist participants of the 2021 Smokestack Quarterly. Her contributed copperplate etching, “Into It” was the result of collaborative print production with Smokestack’s Master Printmaker, Laine Groeneweg, and effective translation of the illustrative skillset she has developed and refined.
Smokestack Quarterly proposes an approachable way to collect original works of art. This year’s collection releases 4 unique prints from 4 contemporary artists from January – December, 2021; 2 collaboratively produced with the Smokestack Digital Studio, and 2 from the Smokestack Analog Studio.
Participating artists will be contributing a new piece reflective of their individual artistic practices. Smokestack Studios will be providing a variety of print media support to actualize their unique ideas that will be shared with collectors quarterly throughout the year.
All 4 prints included in the 2021 Smokestack Quarterly are available for purchase as a collection for $900 (+HST and shipping*). Limited quantities of individual prints are also available for purchase independently.
*shipping calculated at checkout and includes delivery of all Quarterly releases
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October, Fall Edition (Mariel Rutherford)
Into It
Artist Mariel Rutherford is trained and experienced as an independent graphic illustrator. Her characteristically linear style offers imaginative images of surreal characters and forms. Through creation of this coloured etching, Mariel translated her digitally output illustrative practice into a collaborative printmaking experience in Smokestack’s Analog studio.
As she comments:This project has given me an opportunity to flesh out a simple drawing that resonates with me, and create something physical and in my opinion, much more special. Through working with Laine at Smokestack, I had an opportunity to collaborate with someone who has a different creative lens than I do. Laine was willing and able to help me fully realize the potential of this etching. Through this project I have been given a platform to create something new.
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July, Summer Edition (Shellie Zhang)
A Trip to the Store
Shellie Zhang’s photographic works present particularly selected objects that act as a kind of portrait of a particular place or experience. Creation of this new print, A Trip to the Store, offered Shellie another opportunity to more deeply consider how “still life, which is often so removed from place, could be more representative or responsive to it.” (Shellie Zhang)
A Trip to the Store was conceived as a still life ‘snapshot’ of the Parkdale neighbourhood in the summer where Shellie lives and works. All items included in the composition were sourced from shops and related to experiences had in the local area. As she describes:
The aloe was for some extra sun I got that week. The peppers were for a chili sauce I made. Grapes and pears were a fresh treat. The shell was something in my home that I thought made for a nice cornucopia presentation of my trip to the store.
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April, Spring Edition (Micah Adams)
Caribou/hare
Micah Adams has developed a multi-media practice that encapsulates drawing, metalsmithing, and most recently, printmaking. Drawing attention to the aesthetically undervalued designs and history of our loose change, Micah crafts new coin interventions through a unique approach to metalsmithing. Presented with the opportunity to further his investigations in print for the creation of Caribou/Hare, Micah comments,
The Caribou/Hare coin collage started out as an idea/challenge; I wanted to see if the coins could be cut in such a way that the animal designs would match up, thus creating a fictional creature. I also wanted the outside edges to match up akin to overlapping circles. When the chance arose to make an etching – to scale up these coins on a copper plate and then cut them out like the originals – the proposal made for an exciting opportunity and satisfying silhouette.
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January, Winter Edition (Anna Church)
Less Noise Please
Anna Church has committed her artistic practice to an integration of sculpture and photography. In thinking about the approach and creation of Less Noise Please, Anna was compelled to launch herself into a new direction within this expanded process. In her own words,
Creating this piece has taken me on a much needed development journey. I wanted to use this opportunity as a stepping stone for the direction and creation of my next series…and I must say, I’m pretty thrilled with the result!…[Less Noise Please] is about the collaboration between structure and organic matter, and how they can work in harmony if given the space to do so. I’d like to think that this piece [offers] a portal into tranquility; to see two worlds co-existing in a small space without friction or dominance.