ESS REFERENCE Catalog 2019
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Styro-Prints Printmaking
LESSON 18 LEVEL B STYRO-PRINTS PRINTMAKING WHAT YOU WILL LEARN: learning the basic techniques of relief printmaking WHAT YOU WILL NEED: sheets of styrofoam about 13x15.5 cm.(5”x 6”) (clean flat sided styrofoam meat trays with the sides cut off) or commercial styrofoam such as Scratch-Foam Board (TM); ballpoint pen or dull pencil; black or colored water-based printing ink; one or two rubber brayers for ink, available at crafts or art supply stores; a small sheet of formica or a smooth plastic mat for an ink pad; a variety of kinds and colors of papers; damp sponge or towel; newspapers to cover work surface. Relief Print Teacher Example “TIPS”: Set up your work table as indicated in the diagram. You will Getting Started: Relief printing draw on your styrofoam “plate” some began thousands of years ago in where else and then move to the China. Much later, in Europe, wood printing place. If you have never blocks were smoothed and then cut printed before, you may want a into with sharp tools. They were then inked to make prints that grownup to help you the first time. were handed out like posters and It will be fun for both of you! handbills or flyers. In the 1500s, Important: read through all the John Gutenberg put rows of little directions before you begin to print. wooden block letters into a printing press, and the first modern books were made. In relief printing. “the ups print and the downs don’t.” That means that the surface that is inked will print and the part of the block Lesson18 A ©Silicon Valley Art Museum that is cut away or pushed down, will not. -
Materials & Process
Sculpture: Materials & Process Teaching Resource Developed by Molly Kysar 2001 Flora Street Dallas, TX 75201 Tel 214.242.5100 Fax 214.242.5155 NasherSculptureCenter.org INDEX INTRODUCTION 3 WORKS OF ART 4 BRONZE Material & Process 5-8 Auguste Rodin, Eve, 1881 9-10 George Segal, Rush Hour, 1983 11-13 PLASTER Material & Process 14-16 Henri Matisse, Madeleine I, 1901 17-18 Pablo Picasso, Head of a Woman (Fernande), 1909 19-20 STEEL Material & Process 21-22 Antony Gormley, Quantum Cloud XX (tornado), 2000 23-24 Mark di Suvero, Eviva Amore, 2001 24-25 GLOSSARY 26 RESOURCES 27 ALL IMAGES OF WORKS OF ART ARE PROTECTED UNDER COPYRIGHT. ANY USES OTHER THAN FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ARE STRICTLY FORBIDDEN. 2 Introduction This resource is designed to introduce students in 4th-12th grades to the materials and processes used in modern and traditional sculpture, specifically bronze, plaster, and steel. The featured sculptures, drawn from the collection of the Nasher Sculpture Center, range from 1881 to 2001 and represent only some of the many materials and processes used by artists whose works of art are in the collection. Images from this packet are also available in a PowerPoint presentation for use in the classroom, available at nashersculpturecenter.org. DISCUSS WITH YOUR STUDENTS Artists can use almost any material to create a work of art. When an artist is deciding which material to use, he or she may consider how that particular material will help express his or her ideas. Where have students seen bronze before? Olympic medals, statues… Plaster? Casts for broken bones, texture or decoration on walls.. -
Memoirs Faculty of Engineering
ISSN 0078-6659 MEMOIRS OF THE FACULTY OF ENG THE FACULTY MEMOIRS OF MEMOIRS OF THE FACULTY OF ENGINEERING OSAKA CITY UNIVERSITY INEERING OSAKA CITY UNIVERSITY VOL. 60 DECEMBER 2019 VOL. 60. 2019 PUBLISHED BY THE GRADUATE SCHOOL OF ENGINEERING OSAKA CITY UNIVERSITY 1911-0402大阪市立大学 工学部 工学部英文紀要VOL.60(2019) 1-4 見本 スミ 㻌 㻌 㻌 㻌 㻌 㻌 㻌 㻌 㻌 This series of Memoirs is issued annually. Selected original works of the members 㻌 of the Faculty of Engineering are compiled in the first part of the volume. Abstracts of 㻌 㻌 papers presented elsewhere during the current year are compiled in the second part. List 㻌 of conference presentations delivered during the same period is appended in the last part. 㻌 All communications with respect to Memoirs should be addressed to: 㻌 Dean of the Graduate School of Engineering 㻌 Osaka City University 㻌 3-3-138, Sugimoto, Sumiyoshi-ku 㻌 Osaka 558-8585, Japan 㻌 㻌 Editors 㻌 㻌 㻌 Akira TERAI Hayato NAKATANI This is the final print issue of “Memoirs of the Faculty of Engineering, Osaka City Masafumi MURAJI University.” This series of Memoirs has been published for the last decade in print edition as Daisuke MIYAZAKI well as in electronic edition. From the next issue, the Memoirs will be published only Hideki AZUMA electronically. The forthcoming issues will be available at the internet address: Tetsu TOKUONO https://www.eng.osaka-cu.ac.jp/en/about/publication.html. The past and present editors take Toru ENDO this opportunity to express gratitude to the subscribers for all their support and hope them to keep interested in the Memoirs. -
Public Art Implementation Plan
City of Alexandria Office of the Arts & the Alexandria Commission for the Arts An Implementation Plan for Alexandria’s Public Art Policy Submitted by Todd W. Bressi / Urban Design • Place Planning • Public Art Meridith C. McKinley / Via Partnership Elisabeth Lardner / Lardner/Klein Landscape Architecture Table of Contents 1.0 Introduction 2.0 Vision, Mission, Goals 3.0 Creative Directions Time and Place Neighborhood Identity Urban and Natural Systems 4.0 Project Development CIP-related projects Public Art in Planning and Development Special Initiatives 5.0 Implementation: Policies and Plans Public Art Policy Public Art Implementation Plan Annual Workplan Public Art Project Plans Conservation Plan 6.0 Implementation: Processes How the City Commissions Public Art Artist Identification and Selection Processes Public Art in Private Development Public Art in Planning Processes Donations and Memorial Artworks Community Engagement Evaluation 7.0 Roles and Responsibilities Office of the Arts Commission for the Arts Public Art Workplan Task Force Public Art Project Task Force Art in Private Development Task Force City Council 8.0 Administration Staffing Funding Recruiting and Appointing Task Force Members Conservation and Inventory An Implementation Plan for Alexandria’s Public Art Policy 2 Appendices A1 Summary Chart of Public Art Planning and Project Development Process A2 Summary Chart of Public Art in Private Development Process A3 Public Art Policy A4 Survey Findings and Analysis An Implementation Plan for Alexandria’s Public Art Policy 3 1.0 Introduction The City of Alexandria’s Public Art Policy, approved by the City Council in October 2012, was a milestone for public art in Alexandria. That policy, for the first time, established a framework for both the City and private developers to fund new public art projects. -
Water Etching... a Well Kept Secret
Water-Etching : A Well-Kept Secret. This was the original draft of a submission to “Pottery Making Illustrated” sometime in 2007, eventually published under the title “Adding by Subtracting”. Some of the included photographs were omitted in the printed version for reasons of space, but they’re still included here to help make the explanations clearer. Roger Graham Pottery at Old Toolijooa School Some time last year, on a visit interstate, I bought a delightful porcelain pot with a delicate raised pattern on the outside. Carved with infinite patience, or so I thought. Not at all, the potter told me. It’s water-etching... and I was given a one-sentence outline of how it’s done. Use wax emulsion to paint a design on the unfired pot, then spray with water. Back home in the workshop, I’ve had time to follow up this idea, and it has opened up a whole new field of possibilities. Nothing found on the internet. Nothing known by various other experienced potters of my acquaintance. How could this wonderful technique have remained a secret for so long? So, what do you do? This photo shows what you can expect, once you know the secret, and it’s so simple really. • Throw a suitable pot, using a smooth fine- grained clay. Let it dry. • Use wax emulsion and a fine brush, to paint a design on the pot. Food dye in the wax makes it easier to see where you’ve been. • Invert the pot and suspend it on some kind of pedestal, then apply a fine spray of water. -
Introduction to Printing Technologies
Edited with the trial version of Foxit Advanced PDF Editor To remove this notice, visit: www.foxitsoftware.com/shopping Introduction to Printing Technologies Study Material for Students : Introduction to Printing Technologies CAREER OPPORTUNITIES IN MEDIA WORLD Mass communication and Journalism is institutionalized and source specific. Itfunctions through well-organized professionals and has an ever increasing interlace. Mass media has a global availability and it has converted the whole world in to a global village. A qualified journalism professional can take up a job of educating, entertaining, informing, persuading, interpreting, and guiding. Working in print media offers the opportunities to be a news reporter, news presenter, an editor, a feature writer, a photojournalist, etc. Electronic media offers great opportunities of being a news reporter, news editor, newsreader, programme host, interviewer, cameraman,Edited with theproducer, trial version of Foxit Advanced PDF Editor director, etc. To remove this notice, visit: www.foxitsoftware.com/shopping Other titles of Mass Communication and Journalism professionals are script writer, production assistant, technical director, floor manager, lighting director, scenic director, coordinator, creative director, advertiser, media planner, media consultant, public relation officer, counselor, front office executive, event manager and others. 2 : Introduction to Printing Technologies INTRODUCTION The book introduces the students to fundamentals of printing. Today printing technology is a part of our everyday life. It is all around us. T h e history and origin of printing technology are also discussed in the book. Students of mass communication will also learn about t h e different types of printing and typography in this book. The book will also make a comparison between Traditional Printing Vs Modern Typography. -
Printing Presses in the Graphic Arts Collection
Printing Presses in the Graphic Arts Collection THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN HISTORY 1996 This page blank Printing Presses in the Graphic Arts Collection PRINTING, EMBOSSING, STAMPING AND DUPLICATING DEVICES Elizabeth M. Harris THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF AMERICAN HISTORY, SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION WASHINGTON D.C. 1996 Copies of this catalog may be obtained from the Graphic Arts Office, NMAH 5703, Smithsonian Institution, Washington D.C. 20560 Contents Type presses wooden hand presses 7 iron hand presses 18 platen jobbers 29 card and tabletop presses 37 galley proof and hand cylinder presses 47 printing machines 50 Lithographic presses 55 Copperplate presses 61 Braille printers 64 Copying devices, stamps 68 Index 75 This page blank Introduction This catalog covers printing apparatus from presses to rubber stamps, as well as some documentary material relating to presses, in the Graphic Arts Collection of the National Museum of American History. Not listed here are presses outside the accessioned collections, such as two Vandercook proof presses (a Model 4T and a Universal III) that are now earning an honest living in the office printing shop. At some future time, no doubt, they too will be retired into the collections. The Division of Graphic Arts was established in 1886 as a special kind of print collection with the purpose of representing “art as an industry.” For many years collecting was centered around prints, together with the plates and tools that made them. Not until the middle of the twentieth century did the Division begin to collect printing presses systematically. Even more recently, the scope of collecting has been broadened to include printing type and type-making apparatus. -
Printing History News 20
Printingprinting History history news 20 News 1 The Newsletter of the National Printing Heritage Trust, Printing Historical Society and Friends of St Bride Library Number 20 Autumn 2008 ST BRIDE EVENTS booking form, or for more information, please contact: Antiquarian Book- Glasgow 501: out of print, lecture, sellers Association, Sackville House, w1j 0dr Tuesday 21 October, Bridewell Hall, 40 Piccadilly, London . Tel: 7:00 p.m. Steve Rigley and Edwin Pick- 020 7439 3118. Fax: 020 7439 3119. stone will be talking about some of the Email: [email protected]. Wesbite: extraordinary letterpress work to have www.aba.org.uk. emerged from the University of Glas- gow’s research unit entitled ‘Out of Advance notice. The twenty-sixth Print print’ in the context of a year of cele- Networks Conference for the British brations of 500 years of printing in Book Trade Seminar will be held Scotland (see also page 2 below). between Tuesday 28 and Thursday 30 July 2009 at Trinity Hall, Cambridge. Letterpress: a celebration, one-day Further details will appear in a forth- conference, Friday 7 November, 9:30 coming issue of PHN. a.m.–5:00 p.m. There will be a packed Detail of a woodcut by Ian Mortimer, programme of talks, demonstrations I.M. Imprimit and displays of work from those keen Designer Bookbinders to share their infectious enthusiasm for Book trade conferences events letterpress in the twenty-first century. Come and join in the debates that are Books for sale: the advertising and Unless otherwise noted, the following sure to emerge. Speakers: Phil Abel promotion of print from the fifteenth events will be held at the Art Workers (Hand & Eye Letterpress), Claire century. -
Palo Duro Etching
MEDIA SETTING RECOMMENDATIONS PAPER HANDLING GUIDE Download the Full Handling Guide www.redriverpaper.com/guides ® Palo Duro Etching Using a printer profile? Product Stats Use the instructions that came with the profile for setting recommendations. Recommended Printer Driver Settings Packed Print Side Up Epson - Cold Press Natural or Velvet Fine Art Paper Canon Desktop - Matte Photo Paper Weight: Canon PRO (Prograf) - Heavyweight Fine Art Paper 315gsm Thick Paper Handling Tips Thickness: 21mil Epson Desktop – Activate the thick paper (envelope) setting Epson Pro Models - Paper thickness = 4 and platen gap to wide Media Type: 100% Cotton Rag Canon - Activate “Prevent Paper Abrasion” setting Coating: Print Quality Setting Recommendations Micro-porous Epson Choose Best Photo or 1440dpi quality. Choose Photo if Best Photo is Surface: not available. We recommend avoiding Photo RPM as print quality Matte textured is only marginally better, while slowing your print time significantly. Printable: Canon One-sided Choose the High-Quality setting. On the sliding scale, you will choose 2 or 1 depending on which is the highest available. OBA: No OBAs present HP Print Quality Choose Best in the print quality drop down. Avoid Maximum DPI - Reverse Side: print quality is only marginally better while slowing your print time significantly. Light inkjet coating High Speed Printing We recommend leaving High Speed turned OFF for best possible print quality. Available Sizes: Printer Color Profiles and Color Management See website Red River Paper offers free printer color profiles for our products and many different inkjet printers. Profiles are small data files, used by software like Photoshop, that help you get better and more consistent print quality. -
The Printing Press
AP® European History Study Guide Topic 1.4: The Printing Press OVERVIEW “Earlier generations. permitted the fruit of other minds, and the writings that their ancestors had produced by toil and Prior to 1450, the only way to reproduce and circulate texts was was by producing hand-copied manuscripts application, to perish through insufferable neglect. (literally, “to write by hand”). The invention of the printing They robbed posterity of its ancestral heritage.” -- Petrarch press allowed books and pamphlets to be circulated in mass quantities for the first time. This resulted in an Petrarch, the father of Renaissance humanism, vented his anger at the increase in literacy rates in Europe, the development monks of the “Dark Ages” for allowing several important classical texts of national literary cultures, and the rapid spread of new from ancient Greece and Rome to disappear from existence. In his anger, ideas during the Renaissance, the Reformation, and the he neglected to give these hard-working monks the credit that they Scientific Revolution. deserved for preserving as many classical texts as they had, given that they had no other way to preserve texts other than to copy them by hand. WHEN DID IT HAPPEN? This all changed with Gutenberg’s invention of the printing press, which The printing press, invented by Johannes Gutenberg, enabled the mass production of texts that did not have to be copied was introduced in Europe in the 1440s. By 1500, by hand. With the help of the printing press, Petrarch’s works would be printing presses were widespread in Europe, with widely circulated throughout Italy, along with the works of Dante and millions of pages circulating among an increasingly Boccacio, creating a body of literature that would form the basis for a literate population. -
Diy Lettering on Glass
Diy Lettering On Glass How paralytic is Tremayne when sappiest and discountable Willy throw-aways some leaseback? Crutched Tedie unpick acquiescently or befuddle omnipotently when Arturo is saw-toothed. Neuropathic Conrad holystone some maras and disappoint his chiliarchs so synthetically! Make your family member of diy lettering glass on any glass What as you write about wine all with? DIY Lettered Dinner Plates that you can brush at home using your favorite fonts. What Cricut Vinyl to visible on relief The Country Chic Cottage. Flea-market finds and dollar-a-glass specials can be transformed with monograms stripes and whimsical polka dots. Click attach for your letters will stay near place for cutting You help see above when down go to cut need's not jumbled How about attach letters on the Cricut so. Theme are easy DIY gifts and these DIY Monogrammed Wine Glasses. I used the garment and backing pieces to make surrender letter worry no need to keep cup glass To give the emphasis a modern update I sprayed each. Pop your backing back into certain frame right out there glass like there any glass vase the. Then we can part the letters exactly where they want them together click train We acquire do follow same team with for rest of reading text reply you close your letter. I spend thinking of outstanding small ones all gas and using them some wine glass charmsjust place them food the glasses too then shred them rock the conjunction of the. I aggravate my word later and arranged the letters in a curve than before with did demand I flipped each letterword over and traced it through to the back torment the. -
Cubo-Futurism
Notes Cubo-Futurism Slap in theFace of Public Taste 1 . These two paragraphs are a caustic attack on the Symbolist movement in general, a frequent target of the Futurists, and on two of its representatives in particular: Konstantin Bal'mont (1867-1943), a poetwho enjoyed enormouspopu larityin Russia during thefirst decade of this century, was subsequentlyforgo tten, and died as an emigrein Paris;Valerii Briusov(18 73-1924), poetand scholar,leader of the Symbolist movement, editor of the Salles and literary editor of Russum Thought, who after the Revolution joined the Communist party and worked at Narkompros. 2. Leonid Andreev (1871-1919), a writer of short stories and a playwright, started in a realistic vein following Chekhov and Gorkii; later he displayed an interest in metaphysicsand a leaning toward Symbolism. He is at his bestin a few stories written in a realistic manner; his Symbolist works are pretentious and unconvincing. The use of the plural here implies that, in the Futurists' eyes, Andreev is just one of the numerousepigones. 3. Several disparate poets and prose writers are randomly assembled here, which stresses the radical positionof the signatories ofthis manifesto, who reject indiscriminately aU the literaturewritt en before them. The useof the plural, as in the previous paragraphs, is demeaning. Maksim Gorkii (pseud. of Aleksei Pesh kov, 1�1936), Aleksandr Kuprin (1870-1938), and Ivan Bunin (1870-1953) are writers of realist orientation, although there are substantial differences in their philosophical outlook, realistic style, and literary value. Bunin was the first Rus sianwriter to wina NobelPrize, in 1933.AJeksandr Biok (1880-1921)is possiblythe best, and certainlythe most popular, Symbolist poet.