Another charming bit of printed ephemera from Bill.
|
Friday, September 12, 2014
Wednesday, September 3, 2014
Dream Book
Labels:
bohne,
ephemera,
land scouts,
paper
Sunday, August 10, 2014
On the Lake
Our new rental house looks out at Lake Michigan. It is a big big body of water and I'm enjoying seeing the differences here: what's growing now, finding new plants, new colors, shapes, textures, and smells.
Monday, July 28, 2014
Really Big Prints
On Friday my print collaborators (Johanna Winters & Don Krumpos) finally printed our big wood block. We started carving earlier this summer and drove down to UW Manitowoc to ink it up and print on big sheets of paper and fabric with a steamroller.
We met a great group of fellow printmakers and lucked out with very little rain.
Beaucoup des process photos below.
We met a great group of fellow printmakers and lucked out with very little rain.
Beaucoup des process photos below.
| Johanna and Don stand on the jig to keep it from slipping out. |
| Candice rolls up her beautiful block. |
| Katherine's block at rest. |
| Annica the steamrolling queen with Katherine and Candice of Missouri. |
| In front, Chicken Pot Pie, by S.V. Medaris, printmaker and poultry farmer. |
| Berel Lutsky, one of the hosts of Really Big Prints |
| Our crew: Don, Dayna, and Johanna. |
| The lovely Victoria of Austin, TX was a great help with our printing. |
| Final print on Kitakata with women for scale. |
| We pose in the gestures of our saints. |
Labels:
art,
education,
printmaking,
wisconsin
Sunday, April 27, 2014
What the Living Do
Some friends recently tweeted to each other this interview with Marie Howe and I was so glad to see it again. When I think of my late colleague Bill Bohné I am reminded to keep on with what the living do and to live well while I'm at it. Howe is good at getting at the liminal spaces in an ordinary day and the unexpected sacred. When I listened to the story and heard Howe quoting her dying brother I imagined Bill could have said the same, "This is not a tragedy. I'm a happy man...When I'm asked if I could love I can answer yes."
In fact, Bill said as much by being loving and engaged until his last. He was concerned about craft in art, about living well, about teaching, about maintaining the art-ness and weirdness of our discipline, and about celebrating. I'm still mourning him and perhaps feeling sorry for us not to have him physically here. I am living. I remember you.
I first encounter's Howe's work through her poem Part of Eve's Discussion in a college course on the Religious Poetry of Asia. It was the liberal-artiest type of class that one can take in a liberal arts college and the kind that could have been total underwater basket weaving. Instead it was beautiful and unexpectedly practical. Some of the poetry and ideas of that class stuck, rooted, and enriched my thinking and my mourning. In addition to Howe's book of essays Nine Gates: Entering the Mind of Poetry, the class read Robert Hass' Essential Haiku: Versions of Basho, Buson, & Issa (Essential Poets). I've most recently returned to that book for subject matter in my beginning printmaking class. In fact we were sitting around a table in the printshop reading haiku when I learned Bill had died.
In honor of Bill, art, and wit, here is one of my favorite haiku by Kobayashi Issa (translated by Robert Hass).
A bath when you're born,
a bath when you die.
How stupid.
In fact, Bill said as much by being loving and engaged until his last. He was concerned about craft in art, about living well, about teaching, about maintaining the art-ness and weirdness of our discipline, and about celebrating. I'm still mourning him and perhaps feeling sorry for us not to have him physically here. I am living. I remember you.
![]() |
| Mourning sleeves in a swimming pool. |
In honor of Bill, art, and wit, here is one of my favorite haiku by Kobayashi Issa (translated by Robert Hass).
A bath when you're born,
a bath when you die.
How stupid.
Saturday, April 12, 2014
Hungry Turtle
Recently got to work with the newly emerging Hungry Turtle Farm and Learning Center in Amery, WI to produce four illustrations to go in their new building. Hungry Turtle is "committed to supporting sustainable agriculture and land stewardship through education, innovative partnerships, and programming."
I'm excited to continue to work with Hungry Turtle and look forward to seeing how their work grows in Amery. In fact, they'll be hosting Turtle Scouts, their own Land Scout troop! Pretty exciting.
Below are the four illustrations that went up in the windows of the Hungry Turtle building.
I'm excited to continue to work with Hungry Turtle and look forward to seeing how their work grows in Amery. In fact, they'll be hosting Turtle Scouts, their own Land Scout troop! Pretty exciting.
Below are the four illustrations that went up in the windows of the Hungry Turtle building.
Wednesday, April 9, 2014
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)






