Sarah Burgess

Sarah Burgess

Email: sarahburgess6@gmail.com
Website: www.sarah-burgess.com
Website: www.textilestudygroup.co.uk/members

Please click here for examples of my work.

Mono print, or mono-type printing, has become a passion with me. I have always loved drawing and the way that a very simple drawn line or mark, made on the reverse of a piece of paper or fabric which has been laid on a thin layer of printing ink, picks up the ink and becomes so much more expressive never fails to excite me.

Mono-print is ideal for original, creative work on paper or fabric where each print is unique.

Working with print on semi-transparent surfaces gives lots of potential for layering marks and images, cutting through layers and over printing, reusing cut away areas on the front or back of the work and perhaps developing shadows within the layers.

My training as an embroiderer frequently prompts me to add stitch to my prints, building further layers of marks and responding to the printed surface.

There is a lot of water in the valley where I live, streams and deeper pools give marvellous opportunities for reflection. The base of the pool may have decaying leaves and stones overlaid with floating weed, ripples across the surface and the reflections of light pouring through branches overhead dancing in the breeze.

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Exhibition

Anthea Stephenson

Anthea Stephenson

Email: a.r.stephenson@talktalk.net
Tel: 0114 2295404

Please click here for examples of my work.

Having painted and drawn all my life, a few years ago I turned to printmaking. After a few experiments it became clear that collagraph was the medium that attracted me most and I have been focused on it ever since. The long period of drawing and painting had led to an accumulation of sketch books and other work which provided a foundation for making collagraph prints.

The natural world provides an endless choice of possible subjects and very much fits in with my interests as a birdwatcher. Old industrial areas and building sites as well as harbours and shipping areas provide a tremendous variety of subjects.

Part of the attraction of collagraph is its flexibility and the range of approaches it offers; this means that it can be adapted for all kinds of subjects and can produce hard-edged images as well much softer and more atmospheric ones. It also lends itself to experimentation with a variety of materials to produce a wide range of different surface textures.

As well as various events showing with Sheffield Printmakers I have had print work shown at the Harley Gallery, the Ferens Art Gallery in Hull, Derby Open Print Show,  Derbyshire Open (Buxton), the Art House (Sheffield) and the Great Sheffield Art Show.

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Exhibition

Linda Green

Linda Green

Website: www.lindajudithgreen.com
Email: lindajudithgreen@btinternet.com

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I am an experimental printmaker. I love using different techniques such as collography, chine collé and lino printing occasionally combining all three. I sometimes use phone etching as well.

When Sheffield Printmakers was formed in 2015 the focus of my printmaking was on 1950’s textiles partly due to my love of the colours and styles of textiles in that era. This practice led to me using lace left to me by an aunt in a series of collographs called the ‘lacy prints’.

In 2019 during a holiday in Shieldaig in the Highlands I did a series of linoprints that reflect the sense of quiet but also ruggedness of the surroundings and the slow pace of life there.

Continuing with experimentation I am currently using linoprints to print on to  canvas coated in gesso. I have recently submitted a print for the Leicester Print Workshop Small Print International 6 Exhibition based on the aerogramme. 

It has been an inspiration to take part in the Hot Bed Press 20:20 Print Exchange in 2018 and 2019 with a group of members from Sheffield Printmakers.

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Exhibition

Catherine Harnett

Catherine Harnett

Website: www.catherineharnett.co.uk

Please click here for examples of my work.

Like many of my fellow printmakers I am inspired by landscape. I think we are all inspired by the transience of our experience within an environment. It is why we wish to take our own photograph with a phone, rather than buy a picture postcard.

In my case I take such images and make etchings, which present a fluid, abstract world.It happens like this, certain forms and textures and the interplay of light upon them stir me to make a plate, using collaged tape, engraved marks and the lick of a blowtorch.

If I am lucky the plate then takes on a life of its’ own and I work with it. My first print is usually monochrome to show the form. It is always exciting to pull the first print and it constantly comes as a surprise after spending so much time concentrating on the back to front, textured surface of the plate.

Then I enjoy trying different mixes of colour to enhance or change the mood of the finished piece. None of my prints are exactly alike, I have to experiment too much, but after seeing the effect of a group of colours on one plate I often like to try them out on another and then another. This can lead to harmonious sets of work.

My other love is to read and I make tiny books, each from a single print, with quotes from classic authors.

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Exhibition

Valerie Vernon

Valerie Vernon

Email: val_vernon@yahoo.co.uk
Instagram: #printbyval

Please click here for examples of my work.

I have been making prints using lino for many years since graduating from Manchester, combining some with collage. I keep a drawing book to explore ideas, most of which originate from drawings and paintings.

In my work I have been interested in the chaos in nature for quite some time, usually juxtaposed with stability to emphasise contrast. The uncontrolled force of nature is compelling and is constantly changing in the landscape according to the seasons which is a fascinating backdrop to life.

In this series of pieces, the moon provides a constant whilst the chaos of life surrounding it is changing. The pattern is also present as a stabilising force, but that in itself is randomly produced, although it has origins in a range of influences, such as Native American, Maori and Indian cultures.

I use linseed oil printing ink and usually on Japanese vellum. I have exhibited in several places in Yorkshire, Manchester, Birmingham. My work has been shown at South Bank Printmakers Mini Print Show, in London.

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Exhibition

Frances Lewis

Frances Lewis

Instagram: #redkitepress

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I graduated in Painting and Printmaking (BA) from Sheffield Hallam in 2004 and continued printmaking through local classes and in my studio practice.

I have used different techniques from Lino, screenprint, collagraph and copper sulphate etching. Redkite press is my studio at Exchange Place Studios where I screenprint and use my antique bookbinding presses to produce lino cuts.

I have spent three years developing a low technique system to screenprinting. I use screenfiller and screenprinting drawing fluid to produce my screenprints, which involves mark making directly onto the screen.

My work is expressionistic and dreamlike and I illustrate my personal visual stories within them.

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Exhibition

Uura Niemi-Junkola

Uura Niemi-Junkola

ETSY shop: UuraNiemiJunkolaArt
Email: uniemijunkola@gmail.com
Tel: 0114-3276277
Mobile: 07414065130

Hi, I am Uura (Niemi-Junkola),  a Sheffield based artist originally from Finland. 

My work is inspired by colors, textures, shapes, light, water, shadows, situations and nature. My style is mainly semi-abstract or abstract, as I prefer mediums which allows flow and have a natural movement, but which can also add structure. My preferred medium for print work is mono-printing, especially using a gel-plate, as adding water and different layers adds to the movement and depth in the piece.

I also work with watercolor, ink, acrylic, charcoal, pencil works. I rarely have a specific plan for a particular painting as I like the unpredictable nature of combining different colours and mediums in the the creative process.

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Barbara Goodchild

Barbara Goodchild

Email: barbgoodot@gmail.com

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I have had a love of lino and woodcut prints for many years, particularly those of the Grosvenor School, and the images created for public transport information posters between the wars. Soviet art work and more contemporary artists such as Robert Gillmor, Paul Catherall, Max Angus and Dorset-based artist Liz Somerville have also an inspiration for me.

I enjoy the apparent simplicity of linocut and limited use of colour, and my work tends to reflect this. I look for pattern and form, unusual shapes or perspectives, and contrasts in tone and colour which lend themselves so well to the process of lino cut. I use chine colle is some of my prints to add a hit of colour, and use newspaper, sheet music, maps and other backgrounds to complement the image.

I like to experiment with the use of colour in limited form, and use monoprinting, hand colouring and reduction techniques. Local buildings, people’s homes and views from windows have been my recent inspiration as I continue to develop my practice.

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Exhibition

Eva Juusola

Eva Juusola

Instagram: #evajuusola
Email: eva@juusola.co.uk

I am an artist and printmaker based in Sheffield.

After working in watercolours for many years, I took up printmaking in 2019. I started off making collagraph prints, then moved onto aluminium plate etching. I feel that this medium best allows me to express my fascination with light and atmosphere. I enjoy both the discipline of the process and the unpredictability of the end result.

I am inspired by the Peak District and I love nothing more than getting outside and sketching the landscape in all seasons. My watercolour and ink sketches often form the basis for my prints. I aim to capture the moods created by different atmospheric conditions in the simplest way possible, by stripping away any unnecessary detail to get to the essence of the subject.

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Maude Tricker

Maude Tricker

Email: maudetricker@hotmail.com
Website: www.maudetrickerprints.com

Please click here for examples of my work.

Currently, I am concentrating mostly on lino cut prints.  I always enjoy the physical process of carving and cutting the lino block, allowing the different cutting tools to produce marks and textures to build up the final design. I apply inks in thin layers, often with a leather dabber, producing subtle gradations of colour within each layer of printing.

I have just started exploring the possibilities of mono printing, and of combining mono print with lino print to create more painterly effects. I also enjoy experimenting with printing on to different papers, combining watercolour, gesso, and digital giclee print to create interesting surfaces.

Much of my work is inspired by the Yorkshire coast, maps, poems and stories, and Sheffield itself. Artists I love include Melvyn Evans, Michael Kirkman, Edward Bawden and Eric Ravillious. Old railway posters, and graphic and textile designs of the 1950s are also a source of inspiration.

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Exhibition