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BONZE OR BONES - Limited Edition of 5 Print

Jerry DiFalco

United States

Printmaking, Etching on Paper

Size: 12 W x 22 H x 0.9 D in

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About The Artwork

Please note that this etching is shipped to the collector with a frame and archival mat. A sturdy cardboard box is employed for shipping the work. The SAATCHI price includes all handling costs, shipment supplies, framing, mat, packing materials/bubble wrap, plastic wrap for waterproofing, and regular domestic (US) shipment costs to the collector. THE OTHER FOUR IMAGES SHOW THE FOUR PRINTS IN THIS LAST EDITION OF THREE. This etching was made using six individual zinc plates onto which the image was drawn and then etched into a hard ground (a substance composed of natural beeswax, mineral spirits, and oil of spike lavender) with a diamond-point etching needle. The plates are next etched in a nitric acid baths. The hard ground is then cleaned and the entire process is repeated up to six times before the final design is obtained. I took my inspiration from a photograph in the Farber Gravestone Collection, at Cornell University. The scene depicts a tombstone in Salem, Massachusetts that was carved around 1698. It is part of my PLACES FOR THE DEAD series. I employed the etching techniques of intaglio and drypoint in conjunction with the chine collé (Chinese pasting) process; this is a technique that adds colored mulberry bark paper (from Thailand) onto the print during the printing process. I print my own etching editions on a Charles Brand industrial printing press that was manufactured in New York City. The editions were executed at The Center For Works on Paper in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, within Fleisher Art School’s Open Studio in Printmaking. I used intense black ink (oil-based, Charbonnel Brand) on Rives BFK white paper (both manufactured in France). This VERTICAL image is etched on six individual zinc plates, each measuring three inches wide (7.6 cm) by two inches high (5 cm). The print size is about 22” long x 10” wide (65 cm by 20 cm); This is from the FINAL EDITION, WHICH WAS EXECUTED AND FINISHED IN 2020. These also incorporate the technique of Chine colle with Thai mulberry bark paper.

Details & Dimensions

Printmaking:Etching on Paper

Artist Produced Limited Edition of:5

Size:12 W x 22 H x 0.9 D in

Shipping & Returns

Delivery Time:Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.

Imagery and storyline—both vital components of my creative process—enable me to create a form of visual poetry. Consequently, photography is intricate to my artistic strategy, especially with regard to my etchings. In view of this, many of my printed images—accomplished via the studio techniques of intaglio, aquatint, drypoint, and Chine collè—originate from my own photographs, as well as ones I uncover during research into the archives of academia, historical societies, and museums. Upon locating a scene that fascinates me, I first sketch a few original drawings of the likeness, and next transfer that drawing onto my prepared zinc etching plate. NOTE: In my etchings that incorporate the Chine collè process, I use mulberry bark paper from Thailand, which is infused with Japanese kozo threads. The paper is also treated with methylcellulose. I endeavor to establish links between the metaphysical and physical worlds . . . between the realms of dream and reality . . . and between the natural and the fabricated. In a sense, I believe that art unveils everything that we mask behind our assumptions and biases . . . or rather, those realms we neglect—or refuse—to perceive. My label for our failure to examine these areas is, “The Phenomenology of Non-Connectedness", which I blame on today’s communicational tools such as Social Media, the Internet, texting on smart phones, and “tweeting”. MY ETCHING TECHNIQUE I work on metal etching plates treated with both hard and soft grounds. These grounds consist of mineral spirits, beeswax, oil of spike lavender, and other natural substances. After these grounds dry, I draw images with needles and other tools onto the plate. Next, the exposed areas are “etched into” the zinc or copper plate in a bath of Nitric Acid and spring water. An artist’s proof in then printed after the plate is cleaned; Moreover, two to seven additional plate workings, acid baths, and proof printings occur before my desired effect is obtained. When satisfied with my end result, I apply oil based etching ink onto the clean plate and then remove the excess ink with several wipes. Next, I align my etching plate onto the printing press bed and cover it with papers and press blankets. Finally, the plate goes through the press to obtain my print. This process is repeated until all editions are created. I usually create three to five editions of five or six etchings for each one of my plates.

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