Japanese Woodblock
$410.00

includes a $90 materials fee, refer to the materials list for details

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Instructor: Daniel Heyman
Saturday - Monday
November 9 - 11
9am - 12pm
3 sessions at Edgewood Farm

Ever sit in the museum and look at Japanese woodblock prints and wonder how did they do that? Well, this is your chance to find out! In this 3-day workshop you will learn to print using the water-based methods of old Edo Japan. And that means rice paste and brushes, and using a baren instead of a press. The first day will be centered on carving an image into a woodblock. (You are welcome to bring blocks you have already carved). Day two will be for printing this “key block” and making a second block for “kento” registration. Day 3 is dedicated to printing a 2 block 2 color print. Subject matter is completely up to you. Brushes and barens are provided, and rice paste, blocks and paper are available for purchase.

Daniel Heyman is an American artist living along the Atlantic Ocean in rural Rhode Island. He makes paintings, woodblock prints, etchings, drawings and works with paper fiber. His work addresses a wide variety of subjects including the landscape and nature as well as human rights. Mr. Heyman is a recipient of the prestigious Guggenheim Fellowship and the Pew Fellowship. He has been a resident artist at Dartmouth College; MacDowell; Yaddo; in Israel, and several times at the Awagami Paper Factory in Shikoku, Japan. Heyman’s work is in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Library of Congress, Yale University Art Gallery, Philadelphia Museum of Art and Getty Research Institute. Mr. Heyman was Department Head of Printmaking at RISD in 2021-22. His most recent solo exhibition, “Summons: Daniel Heyman” was at Cade Tompkins Projects. In May 2024 he will exhibit his current project,“Flight/Air/Fire/Smoke” at Princeton University’s Lewis Center for the Arts.