SITE VISIT: Deborah Maris Lader at the Chicago Printmaker’s Collaborative

SITE VISIT
Deborah Maris Lader at the Chicago Printmaker’s Collaborative
4912 N. Western Ave.
Chicago, IL 60625

Presented in conjunction with the lecture "On Making; Methods and Techniques for the Production of Artist’s Publications in Historical Context" (also titled “PAN and the Art of Printmaking - Part 1”) at the Richard H. Driehaus Museum.

Bridge Journal Editor-in-Chief Michael Workman was joined by Deborah Maris Lader, Founder and Director of the Chicago Printmakers Collaborative, to discuss the print techniques of a more than a century-long history of artist’s publications. Using the Driehaus Museum exhibition, PAN: Prints of Avant-Garde Europe 1895-1900 and William H. Bradley and The Chap-Book from the Collection of Richard H. Driehaus, as a starting point, Workman and Lader took audience members through decades of technological innovations in printmaking and how artists in the avant-garde tradition of artist’s publications used them to help invent and expand modern and contemporary art, and beyond.

This lecture served to provide a practicum to accompany Workman’s Sept. 2021 lecture, "Avant-Garde Publications in Perspective" on the history of avant-garde magazines, manifestos and other publications, and delved into both the how and why artists who produced them employed the variety of ancient and modern techniques that they did. Picking up where our previous lecture in this series leaves off, we discussed how the Bridge Journal, formed from a collective of contemporary artists in Chicago, has its roots in the printing techniques and artistic lineages of previous avant-garde publications that sought to resist the encroaching demands of commerce, which has often historically sought to subordinate artwork to utilitarian interests.

We further identified the Bridge Journals as emerging specifically out of a number of artistic foundations, notably the Die Brücke (The Bridge) artists movement from the beginning of the 20th century. In addition to questions of artistic autonomy, central to these movements was consistently an intention to bridge the gap between ancient and modern, to demonstrate the ways in which the work of artists in history selected media best suited to their artistic intentions. One widely cited accomplishment of the Die Brücke movement, of course, was the revival of the woodcut, a technique that the collective not only revived but famously used in the printing of their own manifesto by Ernst Ludwig Kirhner. Later, using the relatively newly-developed material linoleum, which was much easier to carve into with blades than wood, they invented the printmaking process of the linocut.

After the demonstration, we took more recently developed techniques into art historical account, and considered the invention and cultural consequences of screen printing (in 1911), dot matrix printing (1925), Xerography (1938), inkjet and laser printing (1950 and 1968, respectively), and how artists embraced them to great social effect. This included a discussion of John Barth’s linotype and handset Janson cloth-cover 1967 “manifesto of postmodernism,” The Literature of Exhaustion, the variety of print techniques employed by publications in the No-ISBN movement, and how Ulises Carrion, for example, published Ephemera magazine by Xeroxing mail art. We also discussed how Carrion was also famously quoted as saying “Amsterdam has not yet discovered the mimeograph” (1885) prior to opening his bookstore / bookworks project space in the city, citing the necessity of the printing technique to his ideals of avant-garde publishing as community-formation, and how the artist often published using only a typewriter and office-supply style spine-binders. In conclusion, we also considered the relatively recent evolution of artist’s printing processes, without taking into account the entirety of the digital revolution.

Following the lecture, on Saturday, Nov. 13 from 2-4pm, Maris Lader gave this presentation of printing processes discussed in the lecture off-site at the Chicago Printmakers Collaborative as a third event in this series.

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Michael Workman

Michael Workman is a choreographer, language, visual and movement artist, dance and performance artist, writer, reporter, and sociocultural critic. In addition to his work at the Chicago Tribune, Guardian US, Newcity magazine, WBEZ Chicago Public Radio and elsewhere, Workman is also Director of Bridge, an artistic collective and 501 (c) (3) publishing and programming organization (bridge-chicago.org). His choreographic writing has been included in Propositional Attitudes, an "anthology of recent performance scores, directions and instructions" published by Golden Spike Press, and his Perfect Worlds: Artistic Forms & Social Imaginaries Vol. 1, the first in a 3-volume series, was released by StepSister Press in October 2018 with a day-long program of performances at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago. Most recently, two of his scores were accepted for publication in a special edition of the Notre Dame Review focusing on the work of participants in the &NOW Festival of Innovative Writing.

https://michaelworkmanstudio.com
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