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About
the ArtistMikio Watanabe was born in Yokohama, Japan in 1954. After graduating from the Ecole des Beaux Arts of Tokyo in 1977, he was drawn to Paris to perfect his mezzotint technique. Admission to the prestigious Atelier 17 of Stanley William Hayter soon followed and he studied engraving there from 1979 to 1981. In 1989 he was awarded at "Salon de la Gravure Originale" in Bayeux , France and in 1992 at "Miniprint International" in Cadaques, Spain. Mikio is a member of the International Academy "Greci-Marino" in Italy. He has dedicated his work to mezzotint since 1981 and after over 50 one man exhibitions, one can now find his work in public and private collections internationally. His hand-rocked, copper plate images are Mikio's sensuous, reverent, and intimate homage to the female form, with a fine quality that bespeaks the artist's many years of devotion to his craft. The History of Mezzotint Mezzotint was invented in Germany in the 17 th century
by an amateur artist, Ludwig von Siegen. At this time, the only method
of achieving texture on the copper plate was cross-hatching and the artists
who reproduced the great works of art found that the techniques available,
did not convey the beauty and subtle qualities of the original paintings.
By using this new method of mezzo-tint, nuances in the old master paintings
were much easier to reproduce because of what the rocked plate offered;
deep, rich blacks and textural hints that were not possible with the earlier
methods. The most important characteristic, and the starting ground of
every image is produced by "rocking" back and forth on the copper
plate in eight different directions. This instrument, (aptly called the
"rocker") , is a bevel-edged, very sharp, crescent-shaped steel
tool. When moved in a rocking motion on the copper plate it cuts or incises
burrs, or ruts onto the softer metal. If rocked in different directions
it will produce intersecting lines, and when looked at, under magnification,
many mountains and valleys are evident. This is called the ground. If
inked at this stage, the copper plate, which has now become a matte surface
(from the original shiny copper surface), would produce a soft, lush,
deep black. The image is then created by pushing down on those "mountains".
The more the artist pushes, the deeper the copper is depressed, and this
pushing begins to shine or "burnish" the plate. The instrument
used to push down those mountains is called a "burnisher". When
printed, those deeply pressed areas do not pick up any ink that is rolled
onto the plate; only the mountains or "ground" pick up the ink.
The genius is not the black and whites that are achieved, but the unbelievable
greys that can be produced; ergo, the name; mezzo, and tinto, or half
and tone in Italian. |
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