Monumental Collaborative Puzzle Prints are huge woodcuts created
and instigated by printmaking artist Maria Arango Diener. City of
the World 2012 is the third of such projects and probably not the
last. Project SUMMARY Generally speaking, a puzzle print is any
print in which the block is sawed into pieces, each of which is
carved and sometimes inked separately. The "puzzle" is then
assembled at press and printed as a single image.
A Collaborative-Puzzle-Print is a special kind of puzzle print
whereby a humongous block or three are painstakingly sawed into
many many many funny shaped pieces. Each of the pieces is then
flown across the world landing squarely in the carving bench of
dozens of brave printmakers everywhere. Each artist carves their
little piece, sometimes unaware of the "big picture" but always
under a theme.
The coordinator receives back the tiny blocks and assembles them
one by one until all come home. The coordinator then assembles and
prints the entire puzzle composed of wonderfully carved images.
Each printmaker then receives a rather large print of the entire
project.
THE THEME for this project is "City of the World," as tightly or
loosely interpreted as each participant wishes. The overall design
interprets the theme literally, that is, the pieces could be part
or entire cars, trucks, apartment windows, houses, clouds, planes,
park benches, trees, shops, pieces of street or sidewalk, buses,
and a very long etcetera. The piece each participant receives may
or may not be recognizable and the shape may or may not influence
the individual's design. The design may be how an individual sees
themselves "in their corner of the world"; how they perceive
themselves within the world or the world of printmaking; a
representation of their actual place in their city or town; more
generally "home"; their view of their city or town, again,
etcetera. Anything goes in the City of the World.
Chronology and Print Information The City of the World 2012 was
started in 2011 and completed in about a year. The resulting print
spanned 6 wood panels and therefore 6 sheets of 22 x 30 inch paper,
resulting in a print around 30 inches tall by almost 9 feet
wide.
THIS BOOK is an expanded colophon of information about each
panel, each piece, each printmaker and each image that composed the
entire monumental woodcut.
The sections of the book include:
-Entire image reproduced -Key to the image -Participants -Each
piece with participant comments -Process photos with
explanation
General
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