
Re: Mexican Woodblocks by High School kids - RAD !
toothaction wrote:
Axolotl wrote:
I loved them! Thanks for sharing Zap!
So, I know nothing about woodblock prints (and I know you are an expert!!) how do they print with two inks?
When we'd make potato or linoleum stamps when I was little you'd just press the carved surface into an ink pad - For multiple color effects I imagine you'd just have to brush the ink on instead.
One way is indeed to brush on different colored inks on the different sections of the block this is what i did here
http://www.flickr.com/photos/zapatoloco/4558317080/, i've done this when i felt a little lazy. But the traditional Japanese way is to make a different block for each color.
two blocks give this result, orange printed first, then the black block (or
key block) which is always last:


nothing wrong with a little mexi-lucha

, same principle as the above:


In the case of the babymarx prints case i think they cut a block for the black and a block for the red.
I agree with you Axo, nice to see something other that luchadores, calaveras and mariachis ...Mexico has such a rich and varied culture. These are nonetheless very Mexican in that the blocks themselves are inspired by the
Taller de Grafica Popular http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taller_de_Gr%C3%A1fica_Popularand certainly also echo the work of Posada. Mexico also played an interesting part in the history of communism and of revolutionary movements.
There's also a Japanese connection as it was in Japan that artist Pedro Reyes found people brave enough ("A samurai doesn’t know the word impossible") to help realize his vision of a sitcom starring puppets in the role of famous political ideologues of the past. These blocks are representations of the puppets from the show. A rich and complex hybrid of japanese and mexican cultures. No wonder these please me so much.
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plastichunter wrote:
I had dreams of having one of these giant magical animal heads as my own.