Turtle Dove Reduction Linoprint

My latest print, ‘Turtle Dove’ is now available to buy from my linoprint shop.

A Turtle Dove? Why?

This is one of my favourite birds. It has a beautiful purring-like call and it is a gorgeous creature with pretty plumage. I’ve been practising the reduction method of linoprinting where each colour layer is printed from the same piece of lino. The lino is carved away for each layer and colour is added on top of the last (which means I can’t go back to print more). I’ve designed my European turtle dove in a traditional arts and crafts style using beige, blue and black inks. It seemed to work well.

Work in Progress

I’ve only seen them once in the UK, whilst camping in Norfolk, and once whilst camping in the Abruzzo in Italy.

Unfortunately, numbers of turtle dove are in decline across Europe and this species has red list conservation status. This is because they are being hunted for sport during their migration from Africa, and the weed seeds and shoots on which it feeds, are harder to find due to modern, intensive farming practices.

If you like the print you can buy the turtle dove artwork from my shop now.

Storing Printed Artwork

I’m making more and more. The prints are piling up. I have a chest of drawers where I keep artwork stacked and flat, but I am I storing artwork properly? I’m a self taught linocut artist who is still in the process of learning how to make stuff at home, working out how to keep pieces safe has been an afterthought until now.

I bought some glassine paper for interleaving.

Putting glassine between prints helps protects your work. It is acid free (it won’t discolour your prints over time), it is a resistant barrier to grease, air and humidity AND it is pulp based. It doesn’t contain plastic, waxy paraffins or films so it is biodegradable and environmentally friendly.

Let us know how and where you keep your work. I feel like I’m doing the right thing, but its always useful to hear tips and advice from other people too.

New Listings on Etsy

This week, Fred the Lion, Mizzen the Unicorn (both printed on gorgeous cream zerkall paper) and May Flowers are available to buy from my Etsy shop.

The trouble I have is that I enjoy the process of making things so much that I tend to neglect my online shop. Are you like that too? It can’t be just me. Bah! but there’s no point in having loads of prints hanging around my house, hidden away when they could be out on display, hanging in other people’s houses.

Foster Hill Road Cemetery

The friends at Foster Hill Road Cemetery in Bedford are working on a history book about the graveyard and the notable people who are buried there. The content will be selected articles that are already published on their website. Why bother producing a book if it’s already available to read online?

Yup! That’s what I thought too. Thing is, there is an older generation, who tend to be interested in local history, who aren’t comfortable with reading from screens or using the internet and prefer traditional paper pages. Hence a book.

There are 14 chapters and I’m producing an illustration for each of them. The sketches are done for most of them and I’m working them up into finished greyscale pieces. It’s a lot of work and the challenge is not to spend too much time on each one.

Leaflets I designed for Foster Hill Rd Cemetery

I’ve worked with the cemetery in the past, producing guided walks on trees and leaflets about what the volunteers do. It was work that’s a little out of my comfort zone. I’m an illustrator, not a graphic designer, but I needed the money and I enjoy trying new things. I also got to learn some local history and some new stuff about the tree species in the cemetery. I didn’t know we had Sequoias in Bedford!

Coffee at Nonna’s

I visited my Italian grandparents every Saturday and Sunday. My brother, sister and nine cousins would all arrive at approximately the same time along with our respective parents and stay the whole afternoon. If our dad and uncles were having a heated card game, we’d stay most of the night too.

It was a small, crowded house and in the summer we’d spill out into the street to play. That was exciting.

Nonna would flit around the kitchen, cooking pasta with meatballs and parmigiana. My exotic Italian relatives spoke a cryptic mix of Italian, English and the Irpinian dialect (a sort of variant of Neapolitan). There was always coffee on the stove, smelling amazing. Decades before cafe chains, we were sipping espresso and dipping biscotti or amaretti biscuits.

Nonna, baby me, and a very good boy

When the UK voted to leave the EU, my older relatives had to apply for permanent residence in a country they’d been living in for the majority of their lives. English relatives on my mother’s side voted to leave. My own brother and sister, who are half Italian like myself voted to leave. My sis is married to an Irishman. I still don’t understand their decisions. I’m afraid to ask them why. Why would they deny other families the opportunities our own had? I feel sad. I feel like half the country have attacked my culture, family and childhood. I’m sure there are good reasons for leaving the EU, but I haven’t been convinced yet. Maybe something tangible and positive will happen eventually.

The Prophetess

The Prophetess was developed from a painting in one of my old sketchbooks

The design of this linoprint was made during an auspicious time in the corona virus pandemic. How long will lockdown last for? Will we get a vaccine? How many people will catch the disease? Our media was swamped with soothsayers. Some with decades of scientific expertise in virology, some were simple cocksure big-mouths eagerly coining it in.

A prophetess speaks and she forecasts… doom! Man has forsaken nature. Learn from the crow. She has flexibility and intelligence. In medieval bestiaries, crows symbolised children caring for their elderly parents and of parents protecting their children.

Throughout history, after a period of turbulence, it’s common to see a rise mysticism and faith. Have you noticed the growth in GenZ witches on instagram and Tik Tok? When things are out of your personal control, magic and religion provide a feeling of some agency. Young witches are enthusiastic about hexing politicians they don’t agree with!

Are things doomed for our youngest generation? Housing and job prospects aren’t secure in the same way it was for their boomer grandparents and because of the climate catastrophe the Earth is probably going to be a wasteland by the end of the century. Will prayers or a magical spells get us out of this mess? I admit, I’m a pessimist. But I don’t have a third eye and I can’t predict the future! I hope (or pray or wish), that with a bit science and sense, things will be better in the future.

Verdant Man

The green man figure is a symbol that humans are a part of nature too. Can you believe some people need to be reminded of that? Look at him- He’s half man and half plant! He’s a centuries old reminder that balance with the world’s ecosystem is important in order for all life on Earth to flourish.

And the devastating consequences for upending this stability? Hello! Its climate change and increasing disease. Ugh. Bloody Covid-19 springs to mind.

Yup. With the corona virus pandemic, these environmental issues were racing around my head, and it seemed obvious to design my own Verdant Man linoprint using green ink.

The Green Man is found in many cultures as an ancient motif for rebirth, new growth and Spring. He is a symbol of optimistic new beginnings. Does that mean I can be hopeful that the global community will emerge from this shitty pandemic with changed behaviour? I doubt it. I know, I know, I’m a grumpy old pessimist. Sorry.

Fred The Lion & Mizzen The Unicorn

Fred The Lion
Mizzen The Unicorn
Two colour reduction prints

Fred Mizen from Great Bardfield, Essex was a corn dolly maker. He constructed exhibits of the Lion, the animal emblem of England, and the Unicorn, Scotland’s heraldic creature, for the Festival of Britain in London in 1951. They were 7ft tall and took about six months to build! Fred Mizen was illustrated by Edward Bawden in ‘Life in an English Village’.

You can tell Fred was a total bad ass, with the patch over one eye. In Bawden’s watercolour, he’s drinking at his local pub with one of his handmade corn dolly bells hanging above him.

Fred Mizen at the pub by Edward Bawden
Fred Mizen at The Festival of Britain

My first attempts at linocut reduction prints are inspired by Fred Mizen’s Lion and Unicorn. I’ve titled them ‘Fred the Lion’ and ‘Mizzen (sic) the Unicorn’. They’ll be on sale in my Etsy shop soon, but if you can’t wait DM me if you’d like to buy one. They are £35 each.