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This multiple-layered print was made during my second week of living through the stay-at-home order in California due to the coronavirus. I used branches I had picked up weeks ago on the ground in my favorite hiking trail nearby. The woods seem to be the one constant, the one solace, the one public space we're allowed to be out in now.  

The print is actually a combination of two cameraless photographs, one from last year when life was simple, and one from today, when all normal activity has been suspended in my region of the US and many other countries that have been hard hit.

It is the result of two cyanotypes (sunprints or blueprints), created one on top of the other. The underlayer was a blueprint that I had bleached yellow. The top layer or exposure in traditional blue was of the dominant image of eucalyptus branches. Blue over yellow combined to make green. Blue over the white silhouettes of wildflowers underneath turned them into blue flowers. 

The radical transformation of one image into a totally different one is a fitting metaphor for our lives this year.
This multiple-layered print was made during my second week of living through the stay-at-home order in California due to the coronavirus. I used branches I had picked up weeks ago on the ground in my favorite hiking trail nearby. The woods seem to be the one constant, the one solace, the one public space we're allowed to be out in now.  

The print is actually a combination of two cameraless photographs, one from last year when life was simple, and one from today, when all normal activity has been suspended in my region of the US and many other countries that have been hard hit.

It is the result of two cyanotypes (sunprints or blueprints), created one on top of the other. The underlayer was a blueprint that I had bleached yellow. The top layer or exposure in traditional blue was of the dominant image of eucalyptus branches. Blue over yellow combined to make green. Blue over the white silhouettes of wildflowers underneath turned them into blue flowers. 

The radical transformation of one image into a totally different one is a fitting metaphor for our lives this year.
This multiple-layered print was made during my second week of living through the stay-at-home order in California due to the coronavirus. I used branches I had picked up weeks ago on the ground in my favorite hiking trail nearby. The woods seem to be the one constant, the one solace, the one public space we're allowed to be out in now.  

The print is actually a combination of two cameraless photographs, one from last year when life was simple, and one from today, when all normal activity has been suspended in my region of the US and many other countries that have been hard hit.

It is the result of two cyanotypes (sunprints or blueprints), created one on top of the other. The underlayer was a blueprint that I had bleached yellow. The top layer or exposure in traditional blue was of the dominant image of eucalyptus branches. Blue over yellow combined to make green. Blue over the white silhouettes of wildflowers underneath turned them into blue flowers. 

The radical transformation of one image into a totally different one is a fitting metaphor for our lives this year.
This multiple-layered print was made during my second week of living through the stay-at-home order in California due to the coronavirus. I used branches I had picked up weeks ago on the ground in my favorite hiking trail nearby. The woods seem to be the one constant, the one solace, the one public space we're allowed to be out in now.  

The print is actually a combination of two cameraless photographs, one from last year when life was simple, and one from today, when all normal activity has been suspended in my region of the US and many other countries that have been hard hit.

It is the result of two cyanotypes (sunprints or blueprints), created one on top of the other. The underlayer was a blueprint that I had bleached yellow. The top layer or exposure in traditional blue was of the dominant image of eucalyptus branches. Blue over yellow combined to make green. Blue over the white silhouettes of wildflowers underneath turned them into blue flowers. 

The radical transformation of one image into a totally different one is a fitting metaphor for our lives this year.
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VIEW IN MY ROOM

A Walk in the Green Woods - Limited Edition of 1 Print

Christine So

United States

Printmaking, Monotype on Paper

Size: 12 W x 18 H x 0.1 D in

Ships in a Box

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SOLD
Originally listed for $200
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Artist Recognition

link - Showed at the The Other Art Fair

Showed at the The Other Art Fair

link - Artist featured in a collection

Artist featured in a collection

About The Artwork

This multiple-layered print was made during my second week of living through the stay-at-home order in California due to the coronavirus. I used branches I had picked up weeks ago on the ground in my favorite hiking trail nearby. The woods seem to be the one constant, the one solace, the one public space we're allowed to be out in now. The print is actually a combination of two cameraless photographs, one from last year when life was simple, and one from today, when all normal activity has been suspended in my region of the US and many other countries that have been hard hit. It is the result of two cyanotypes (sunprints or blueprints), created one on top of the other. The underlayer was a blueprint that I had bleached yellow. The top layer or exposure in traditional blue was of the dominant image of eucalyptus branches. Blue over yellow combined to make green. Blue over the white silhouettes of wildflowers underneath turned them into blue flowers. The radical transformation of one image into a totally different one is a fitting metaphor for our lives this year.

Details & Dimensions

Printmaking:Monotype on Paper

Original:One-of-a-kind Artwork

Size:12 W x 18 H x 0.1 D in

Shipping & Returns

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

Clients include: Timothée Chalamet, Starbucks, Mayo Clinic (Jacksonville), Jumaira Resort, Lux Habitat Sotheby’s International (Dubai), Wyndham Worldmark Hotels, Kimpton Hotel Monaco (Salt Lake City) , Mazars Accounting, Limelight Hotel Mammoth (California), MD Anderson Hospital (Houston), Oncology Center, Houston Methodist Hospital. For a complete list of my corporate clients, visit the "About" page of my website www.christineso.gallery/ To see videos of my artistic process, visit me on instagram at @christinesogallery I live in the woods in northern California looking out across the San Francisco Bay towards the hills of Marin, San Francisco and Angel Island. The distant blue hills of my “Faraway Hills” series are ever-present fixtures in my real life. Down below is the bay and above is an endless web of tree branches. Their silhouettes have etched themselves into my memory. My paintings and prints are always nature-inspired and nearly always monochromatic. Having spent a decade as a printmaker making woodcuts, linocuts, etchings, aquatints and monotypes, my mind works in monochrome. I focus on a single color, composition, positive and negative space, pattern, lines and shape. I currently work in two mediums, acrylic painting and cyanotypes, a form of camera-less photography. Cyanotypes are a 19th century form of lensless photography also known as photograms, blueprints and sun prints. They resemble block prints or etchings but use no ink nor printing press. Light “etches” the image on paper I had painted with light-sensitive chemicals. MY NEWEST SERIES OF ABSTRACT CYANOTYPES: My technique is a form of experimental photography, much like the action painters Morris Louis, who poured his veil paintings, or Jackson Pollock who dripped and drizzled his. My abstract cyanotypes are luminous like watercolor paintings but are actually photographs. Each is a multiple-exposure lensless photograph make through deliberate movements of the light-sensitive paper during exposure to light. 

Different sections of the paper were exposed to light for a longer or shorter time, yielding multiple shades of blue. Each abstract cyanotype is entirely unique. These same lines, shapes and shades of blue cannot be recreated as the exposure of the paper was heavily manipulated by me during each printing.

 A traditional single-exposure cyanotype yields a white silhouette against a dark blue background.

Artist Recognition

Showed at the The Other Art Fair

Handpicked to show at The Other Art Fair presented by Saatchi Art in Los Angeles

Artist featured in a collection

Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection

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