Portrait of an Artist
For
Laurence Scholder, printmaking is the medium that best represents
what he calls "the language of my discourse" – the line. "The
line can depict a form from nature, divide figure from ground, indicate
size and direction, record nuances of weight, or graph a system of proportion
removed from any form of representation. It is through the accumulation
and collision of the lines that I find what the work is going to become," he
says. Normally Scholder works with intaglio prints, in which the images
are printed black on white from a recessed design etched into the surface
of a plate. His most recent works are etchings printed in relief, in which
the linear elements appear as white on black. "An unintended consequence
of printing the plates in relief is the way the various elements in the
plate are seamlessly merged in a homogeneous surface," he says. Scholder's
etchings have been displayed in numerous solo and group exhibitions
and can be found in public collections. The professor of
art has taught at SMU
since 1968. He earned his M.A. from the University of Iowa.
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Afar, 1993 |
Twixt, 2001 |
Whirl, 1999 |
Duple, 2001 |
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