Prints in the snow; A giant print biennial at the University of Minnesota ranges widely over both technique and subject matter.(VARIETY / FREETIME)

From: Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN) | Date: January 23, 2004| Author: Abbe, Mary | Copyright information

Byline: Mary Abbe; Staff Writer

Individual visions and a profusion of techniques characterize the 122 prints in the University of Minnesota's fourth national print biennial, on view through Feb. 19 at the new Regis Center for Art on the West Bank campus.

Handcrafted by the artists, the prints represent the full range of graphic processes from traditional etching, aquatint, intaglio and lithography to more contemporary silkscreen and inkjet prints. Some artist...

Related newspaper, magazine, and journal articles from HighBeam Research

Prints in the snow; A giant print biennial at the University of Minnesota ranges widely over both technique and subject matter.(VARIETY / FREETIME)
Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN) ; Byline: Mary Abbe; Staff Writer Individual visions and a profusion of techniques characterize the 122 prints in the University of Minnesota's fourth national print biennial, on view through Feb. 19 at the new Regis Center for Art on the West Bank campus. Handcrafted by the artists, the prints
Bob Lang fans find popular calendars at Apple Blossoms.(Business)
Daily Herald (Arlington Heights, IL) ; Byline: Heather Cunningham If you're organized, the idea dawns on you earlier, but for many the panic sets in only after Christmas. Where will you find a 2003 calendar? For many Fox Valley residents, insurance company versions don't cut it. Only one of the popular Lang calendars will do. For these
PRINT POWER; The University of Minnesota's Fifth National Print Biennial brings a world of talent to the Twin Cities.(SCENE)
Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN) ; Byline: Mary Abbe; Staff Writer Even in this age of instant images, old-fashioned printmaking remains among the most intimate and appealing of art forms. Drawn on a lithographic stone, chemically etched onto a scratched metal plate, or gouged into a slab of wood, fine-print images carry the mark of
ART; NATIONAL PRINT BIENNIAL.(ENTERTAINMENT)
Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN) ; Byline: Mary Abbe; Staff Writer OPENING: In the digital age, traditional printmaking is undergoing a revolution that will bubble into view Tuesday, when the fourth National Print Biennial opens at the University of Minnesota. The biennial attracted 1,200 entries from artists in 48 states. Of them,
Florals' beauty embraces decay; English and American prints
The Boston Globe ; ... Charles Harden's natural history etchings of a dragonfly and a fiddler crab delicately portray each detail over a ground that maps out lines moving beyond each creature's body into an elegant cartography. Fujiko Isomura's hand-modified inkjet prints take a ...
S'no fooling, just fun.
La Crosse Tribune (La Crosse, WI) ; ... Peace Lutheran Church in La Crescent, Minn. Copyright (c) 2007, La Crosse Tribune, Wis. Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Business News. For reprints, email tmsreprints@permissionsgroup.com, call 800-374-7985 or 847-635-6550, send a fax to 847-635-6968, or write ...
Print biennial; ART FIT TO PRINT.(FREETIME)
Star Tribune (Minneapolis, MN) ; Handmade fine-art prints remain among the most intimate and expressive art forms available. Printmaking media - etching, lithography, screen printing, monoprints and others - are rapidly changing under the influence of computer technology. The Third Minnesota National Print Biennial, opening
Blossoms, buds go wild // Mild weather brings out riot of color early
Chicago Sun-Times ; If you think this spring's tulips are tremendous and apple blossoms so profuse that they almost bend the boughs, your eyes are not deceiving you. It is a memorable spring. "This year, everything's early - a couple of weeks ahead of schedule because of the mild spring, and things that would be
A FROSTY WEEK.(News)
The Post-Standard (Syracuse, NY) ; Byline: Staff writer Mark Weiner Workers at Beak & Skiff Apple Farms in LaFayette assessed damage Tuesday from last week's killer freeze that destroyed about a third of the orchard's apple crop. More damage was possible Tuesday night as the farm prepared for a light frost, the third
Trees in bloom
Charleston Daily Mail ; Apple blossoms burst open in the warm, wet weather Wednesday afternoon on the grounds of the Capitol Complex. Skies are expected to be clearer tonight, and Friday is supposed to be sunny with a high of 72 degrees.