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Working proof for Fire

Josephine Halvorson (American, born in 1981)
2019

Medium/Technique Black ink soft ground line etching on white Somerset Satin 300 gsm, notes in pencil and colored pencil
Dimensions Height x width: 67.3 × 76.8 cm (26 1/2 × 30 1/4 in.)
Credit Line The Living New England Artist Purchase Fund
Accession Number2021.387
NOT ON VIEW
ClassificationsPrints
In a year-long process, artist Josephine Halvorson explored the intricate multistep process of creating a sophisticated colour print with Wingate Studio and master printer James Pettengill in New Hampshire. The relationship between the artist and master printer has a rich history, critical to the foundations of printmaking itself. The master printer’s expertise and technical knowledge of certain processes are critical to guiding the actualisation of an artist’s work, both physically and aesthetically. “Fire” is Halvorson’s first etching and her painterly background, affinity for everyday objects, and close in-person observation is evident in each step of the process. The wood-burning stove is located in the printmaking workshop and is a Jotl, a brand that Halvorson’s parents sold during her childhood. She experimented with a variety of techniques including: drypoint, soft ground etching, aquatint, spit bite, sugar lift, modifying the copper plates repeatedly. After each modification, an image, or proof was printed, its visual effects analysed, and subsequently revised.
Halvorson traced her final drawing with a thin graphite stick onto the soft ground of the key plate, or the plate containing the complete image and used to position partial images on other plates for each individual colour. The printers then pulled this proof in which the drawing was successfully printed in black ink. The proofs, 43 in total, will serve as a valuable teaching tool at the MFA as they demonstrate the varied and nuanced effects of each technique, while annotations reveal how essential dialogue between artist and printer is as they work toward the life-size final proof before the edition.

DescriptionAfter the artist transferred her drawing to the soft ground plate, the printers etched the plate, inked it in black ink, and pulled the first proof. This is the key plate, the plate containing the complete image and used to position partial images on other plates for each individual color.
Provenance2019, the artist and Wingate Studio, Winchester, NH; 2021, sold by Wingate Studio to the MFA. (Accession Date: June 16, 2021)
Copyright© Josephine Halvorson