Re: [pinhole-discussion] self-intro/printmaking

2001-09-26 Thread Eric S. Theise
Colin Talcroft writes:

 Could you tell us more about the Headlands Center?

That's a pretty broad question.  For an overview, check out:

http://www.headlands.org/

The site has sections on the history and mission, a list of artists
in residence dating back to the beginning of the Center, a list of
upcoming and several past years worth of public programs, and last year's
guidelines for applying to either the residency program or the affiliate
artist program.

If you have any specific questions, I can answer them or find out the
answers for you.

Best, Eric



Re: [pinhole-discussion] self-intro/printmaking

2001-09-26 Thread Colin Talcroft
Could you tell us more about the Headlands Center?

Thanks

Colin

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Re: [pinhole-discussion] self-intro/printmaking

2001-09-25 Thread Guillermo
- Original Message - 
From: Eric S. Theise mat...@cyberwerks.com


  I'm a sysadmin and web designer and yes I use vi 

Here is for all of you VI lovers:
(will never do it again Gregg, I promise!)

ADICTED TO VI

You press the keys with no effect,
Your mode is not correct.
The screen blurs, your fingers shake;
You forgot to press escape.
Can't insert, can't delete,
Cursor keys won't repeat.
You try to quit, but can't leave,
An extra bang is all you need.

You think it's neat to type an a or an i--
Oh yeah?
You won't look at emacs, no you'd just rather die
You know you're gonna have to face it;
You're addicted to vi!

You edit files one at a time;
That doesn't seem too out of line?
You don't think of keys to bind--
A meta key would blow your mind.
H, J, K, L?  You're not annoyed?
Expressions must be a Joy!
Just press f, or is it t?
Maybe n, or just g?

Oh--You think it's neat to type an a or an i--
Oh yeah?
You won't look at emacs, no you'd just rather die
You know you're gonna have to face it;
You're addicted to vi!

Might as well face it,
You're addicted to vi!

You press the keys without effect,
Your life is now a wreck.
What a waste!  Such a shame!
And all you have is vi to blame.

Oh--You think it's neat to type an a or an i--
Oh yeah?
You won't look at emacs, no you'd just rather die
You know you're gonna have to face it;
You're addicted to vi!

Might as well face it,
You're addicted to vi!

Copyright 1989, by Chuck Musciano.  All Rights Reserved





[pinhole-discussion] self-intro/printmaking

2001-09-25 Thread Eric S. Theise
Hi everyone,

First there was that burst of intros, now there's the discussion
on printmaking.  With the recent Internet worm knocking two days off
my schedule -- I'm a sysadmin and web designer and yes I use vi -- I
haven't had a lot of spare writing time but I should pop in now while
the context is right...

I'm Eric Theise, 42, originally from Chicago, have lived in San Francisco
for twelve years.  Up until recently, I've always let making art slide
in favor of making a living and having some sort of career.  But I've
taken pictures since I was in grade school, and did some 16mm film work
in the 80s.

Last summer I took an etching workshop at Crown Point Press, and got
very fired up about the whole thing.  I joined what is basically a
printmakers co-op in Berkeley called Kala, and this summer I took the
photogravure workshop at Crown Point.  In preparation for that, I built
a 4 x 5 pinhole camera out of pine and a grafmatic back, and have by now
finished editioning five photogravures, and am getting ready to shoot
and print some more.

The work is interesting, I think -- I will eventually get some up on the
web -- but it puts me in a funny position because I presently think of
myself as a printmaker who's used photographic means to get an image onto
a copper plate.  But everyone who sees the work thinks I'm a fine art
photographer.

Well, okay.

In short, photogravure is a mid-1800s technique, possibly the first
successful technique for printing photographic images.  It involves
contact printing a full sized positive onto a sensitized gelatin sheet,
affixing the gelatin to a copper plate which is dusted in rosin --
aquatinted -- and etching through the gelatin into the copper via a
series of acid baths.  The plate is printed with etching ink and a press
like any intaglio method.  Even though photogravure was supplanted by
rotogravure by the early 1900s, it was used by Alfred Stieglitz for most
of the pieces in Camera Work, by Edward Curtis for his famous series
of North American Indians, and by Paul Strand for his Mexican series.
It is a fairly complex and error-fraught process.

So that's what I do, and why I'm here.

Seems like we may have a quorum for a Bay Area pinhole group, and I
will certainly invite any Bay Area people out to the Headlands Center
for the Arts for the Fall Open House, Sunday October 14th from noon to
5pm, where I'll be showing this work, the camera, and some other prints.
Three buildings full of art and artists; I'm in the basement of Building
960 overlooking the Historic Nike Missile Site (for real).

More later.

Best, Eric