28 February 2024

Time to Start a New Blog


Dear readers.

I'm moving my blog!

It's been 19 years since I started Woodblock Dreams blog, and there are over 900 posts here. It's a valuable collection of ideas, trials and errors, tips, tricks, and comments from others that developed as I learned how to make mokuhanga prints. I still come back to it as a studio diary, to help me remember when I did certain work and what I was thinking at the time.

And now it's time for me to make a fresh start. I'll leave this blog up because I've loved it and I think there are some folks who have also loved it. No reason to take it down.

But if you'd like to follow me on my new blog, the address is:

https://anniebissettblog.wordpress.com

I'd love to see you there! Thank you for being here.

26 January 2024

More About the Guardians

Rebecca Solnit recently posted on Facebook excerpts from an essay about stuffed animals that meshes beautifully with this Guardians project I'm working on. Here's a portion:

The English psychoanalyst Donald Winnicott was the first person to write seriously and with sensitivity about the business of teddy bears. In a paper from the early 1960s, Winnicott described a boy of six – whose parents had been deeply abusive to him – becoming very connected to a small animal his grandmother had given him. Every night, he would have a dialogue with the animal, would hug him close to his chest and shed a few tears into his stained and greying soft fur. It was his most precious possession, for which he would have given up everything else. As the boy summarised the situation to Winnicott: ‘No one else can understand me like bunny can.’

What fascinated Winnicott here was that it was of course the boy who had invented the rabbit, given him his identity, his voice and his way of addressing him. The boy was speaking to himself – via the bunny – in a voice filled with an otherwise all too-rarely present compassion and sympathy.

This is most likely why the response I received on social media when I posted my woodblock portrait of my old teddy bear was so instantaneous and enthusiastic. We remember.

Here are the steps in making my bear portrait.

First a pale brown, and beginning to add texture to the "bare" spot on Tedward's head.

A darker brown with a little more detail carved out.

A new shade of brown with more detail carved away.

The texture for the bare spots was made with a bit of window screen pressed into the paper.

Some shading added.

Nose and eyes to finish.


 
Tedward was made from a progressively carved single block (reduction print) and here's what the block looked like at the end.





17 January 2024

Guardians

Last spring I was offered an opportunity to show at a gallery here in Providence RI and I decided to make a series of landscape prints. One of the prints in that landscape series was this image of Sandy Hook Elementary School where 20 children and 6 adults were gunned down in 2012.

While I was making this print I read an article in the NY Times about the investigators who worked the Sandy Hook crime scene and their experiences while handling the children's belongings. I glanced at the old teddy bear from my childhood who now lives in my studio and suddenly felt the import of this stuffed animal — the fact that it is over a half century old and that I have had the great good fortune of growing to adulthood. I suddenly felt that this stuffed bear, Tedward, could be seen as a "guardian" and I made a woodblock portrait of him in one weekend.

When I posted Tedward on Instagram the response was instantaneous and positive, and I realized that I had struck a nerve. I put out a call to my Instagram followers for photos of Childhood Guardians and I received nearly 50 submissions. I don't think I'll be able to produce portraits of them all, but I'll definitely do 20 of them in honor of the 20 children who were murdered at Sandy Hook. 💔