Pecan trees at St. Paul’s Church, San Antonio, TX, during the pandemic lockdown. March 2020. In old times, an image was captured on a plate that could be inked and...
Pecan trees at St. Paul’s Church, San Antonio, TX, during the pandemic lockdown. March 2020. In old times, an image was captured on a plate that could be inked and printed by pressure through an etching press. Nowadays, digital offers us another way forward to soulful prints. Modern inkjet printers let us make a transparent positive, which is then placed against a plate covered with an emulsion of photo-initiating polymer. Exposure to UV light transfers the image to the plate where it can be “etched” with water. The artist used a single exposure with transparency and printed "a la poupee" (stumps of rags)
These digitally produced photolithographs combined with traditional lithography made from photographs taken in various locations around the world of singular, stoic trees. In the words of curator Lyle Williams, “These prints capture not only the specific patterns in which the trees have grown but communicate something that we might call the character of these organisms; the etchings in a sense are portraits of these sentinels that have stood in our landscape for centuries watching over the relatively transient lives and histories of mankind… A print of an ash tree looks like an old photographic negative, like it belongs to another time; its branches form familiar patterns over the surface of the composition… This post-pandemic work reminds us that we don’t know what the future holds.” These more solid, sentient structures in their inversions in some way mimic the clouds’ organic fractal-like structure, but they also speak to a much longer history and to solidity and strength in the face of adversity.