Showing posts with label Printmaker. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Printmaker. Show all posts

Meet the Maker - Faisal Khouja

Thursday, May 23, 2013
We are delighted to have Faisal as part of the Made in Britain team.  Faisal creates detailed lino prints, which are proving a hit in our shop.  Here is a little interview with him:

Please can you introduce yourself and tell us a little about your work? 
My name is Faisal Khouja and I work as a Linocut Printmaker, Painter, Illustrator and Photographer. My Linocuts are cut from multiple blocks which are then inked up and printed by hand using a traditional Letterpress. My oil paintings are done from memory using syringes for a more fluid feel. My Illustrations share the same solid black line of the oil paintings but incorporate watercolour, pen and ink and anything else I feel like using. I am also a trained photographer and use a range of different equipment to produce fine art prints. 

Apart from creating things what else do you do? 
I work part time helping my partner, Laura Mirjami, who is also an artist and has her own business, Mirjami Design. Also I am somewhat of a philosopher and can spend hours contemplating the nature of reality and other concepts. I don't think I can separate anything I do from being an artist as it is a way of like for me. 

When did you know you were an artist/maker? 
I became an artist after getting "burnt out" whilst working as a commercial photographer in London. I have even changed my name to make sure I can have a clean break from my old life. 

What do you love most about working in your chosen discipline? 
The freedom to use different media to respond creatively to anything that I choose. 

Where does your inspiration come from? 
Initially after my illness i spent a lot of time in nature, in the wild places, so flora and fauna featured heavily in my work. Now I am becoming more and more interested in urban places and cityscapes as well as more abstract concepts regarding the human condition. My next projects will feature these themes more heavily. 
Describe your studio or workspace? 
I have a room in my house where the light is good and I can spend time drawing, painting, thinking and reading. I have taken up the carpet and painted the floorboards so that I can throw a lot of paint about if the urge takes me. Also I share printmaking facilities with others at the Gloucestershire Printmaking Co-operative in Stroud. 

If you could peek inside the studio of any artist, designer or craftsman (dead or alive), who would it be? 
It would probably be the great photographer Irving Penn or even Leonardo da Vinci. I might even be tempted to pick up one of Leo's palettes and sell it on Ebay to secure my financial future! 
How would you describe your creative process? 
It involves making a trip to a place, then coming home to contemplate my subject and the work (hopefully) forms in my mind's eye. 

What handmade possession do you most cherish? 
I have a pair of Moroccan slippers which are very simple yet demonstrate great craftsmanship. 
What do you when you are stuck in a creative rut? 
I usually mope about feeling sorry for myself for several days, lamenting the creativity leaving me, before rousing myself and making a trip to muster inspiration. 

Where would you like to be in ten years? 
In a place of greater clarity.

Thank you Faisal, a really great interview.  You can find Faisal's intricate lino printed work in our Made in Britain shop.

Made in Britain
(Next to Carluccio's)
Quakers Friars
Cabot Circus
Bristol
Mon - Sat: 10am - 6pm
Sun:  11am - 5pm

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Meet the Maker - Freya Cummings

Friday, May 03, 2013

We so happy to introduce today's Meet the Maker, the very lovely and talented Freya Cummings...

Please can you introduce yourself and tell us a little about your work?

My name is Freya and I'm a Screen Printer. I lived in Bristol for seven years from 2004 to 2011 after moving there to study Printmaking at UWE. Some friends and I ran Snap Studio, a screen-printing studio and gallery in Bristol for a while. It's closed now, but I really got into printing there and it started me on my way. I moved home to Scotland recently and I produce Limited Edition Prints, cards, cushions and bags and occasionally, wallpapers and wedding invites from my studio at home.


Apart from creating things what else do you do?

Not very much! I'm spending every minute at the moment getting ready for a trade fair in London next week. I'm hoping to launch some new wallpapers and other products. I'm also coming to Bristol for a visit afterwards and I can't wait!



When did you know you were an artist/maker?

I don't remember a time when I didn't want to go to Art College, except for a time when I was ten, and I wanted to be a farmer.


What do you love most about working in your chosen discipline?

I love the fact that in Screen printing you can easily combine drawings, photographs, painting and pattern and that I can be very messy, but the process will smooth it all out.



Where does your inspiration come from?

When I lived in Bristol, I was inspired by the architecture and my work was very Urban based, now that I'm in the country, my work has changed quite a lot and now it's very rural, so it comes from my surroundings, much more than I had realised before I became a country bumpkin....


Describe your studio or workspace?

A complete mess, I turned a bedroom in the house into my studio. I print at one table and draw at another and have a string of pegs for drying my work. I love having my own work space, it looks out across the garden to the hills beyond. It's my first studio on my own and I love it, but I miss the friends I shared SNAP with too, so if I feel I am going completely mad on my own, I drive into Dundee and print there. 


If you could peek inside the studio of any artist, designer or craftsman (dead or alive), who would it be?

I'd like to look at loads, I'm very nosey. Probably William Morris at the moment. I'd have a few questions for him about wallpaper design. I'm having some repeat pattern problems right now.


How would you describe your creative process?

Painful! I spend too much time thinking about prints-to-be and not enough time actually making them. But when I've started something, then I'm happy. I need deadlines! 


What handmade possession do you most cherish?

Lots, I have a lot of handmade possessions, I think that the felted emergency tea-bag holder that my friend crafted for me has to be up there for it's inventiveness.


What do you when you are stuck in a creative rut?

Either procrastinate by doing other things, until something comes to me, or stare at the walls of my studio, until something comes to me..



Where would you like to be in ten years?

Doing exactly the same thing, but with a bigger studio for printing wallpaper, I had to use my parents dining room recently. A bit more financial security would be nice too.

Freya your colourful screen prints are a delight.  You can find Freya's beautiful work in our Made in Britain shop here in Bristol.
Made in Britain
(next to Carluccios)
Quakers Friars
Cabot Circus
Bristol
Mon-Sat:  10am - 6pm
Sun:  11am - 5pm

Read More »