Country Life

Cutting it fine

The ancient art of wood engraving requires introspect­ion and secrecy in order to create intriguing and intricate pieces of work, discovers Clive Aslet

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The ancient art of wood engraving requires introspect­ion to create intricate pieces of work, says Clive Aslet

If you want an antidote to the computer screen, turn to wood engraving. ‘We’ve reached 1790, with dashes of the 1920s,’ discloses one practition­er, who would rather not be named for fear of incurring the wrath of other artists. This is an art, with a strong admixture of craft, in which it routinely takes days, if not weeks or months, to produce works of unassuming dimension—so small that they’re sometimes best appreciate­d with the help of a magnifying glass.

‘This is an artform in which people think small and in black and white’

‘OCD,’ declares another exhibitor at the annual show by the Society of Wood Engravers (SWE), of the temperamen­t required. ‘It’s ridiculous,’ admits Peter Lawrence, whose work is given pride of place as this year’s featured artist, of the amount of labour involved. ‘I like to include humour. That becomes difficult when you may be working on the same piece for 300 hours.’

for the collector, however, the obsessiven­ess of the artists yields a glorious reward. In relation to the amount of time spent in producing them, these modestly priced works —they rarely cost more than a few hundred pounds—are the steal of the century. Produced not in warehouse-sized studios, but often on kitchen tables, the works are intimate, if not always in subject, then in the mode of creation. This invites introspect­ion, even secretiven­ess, and I’m told that artists

are often astonished to discover what their peers have been working on and the methods involved.

For strangely, as the SWE exhibition, now touring the country, demonstrat­es, this ancient technique can be used to create ofthe-moment effects. Some works are bold, even gritty. Every day, thousands of people pass the wood engravings that David Gentleman made for London Transport in 1978, which have been enlarged to platform scale.

These much loved images of the building of the medieval Eleanor Cross—that is said (incorrectl­y) to have given Charing Cross its name—have an equivalent in Newcastle upon Tyne. To celebrate the 250th anniversar­y of Thomas Bewick’s birth in 2003, the Metro there commission­ed a suite of wood engravings for its stations from Hilary Paynter (01237 479679; http://hilarypayn­ter. com). With the subject ‘From the Rivers to the Sea’, the artist was careful to include plenty of detail at the bottom of the panels to interest children as they wait for trains. However, these are exceptions. The natural condition of wood engraving is to be small. It opens a peephole into a private world.

Take out your spectacles. Like wildflower­s, wood engravings are best seen up close. They invite contemplat­ion. This medium is the antithesis of throwaway consumeris­m and internet-induced short attention spans. Its natural home is, to many people, the countrysid­e—the British countrysid­e at that.

Although the exhibition includes artists from as far away as Russia, China and Japan, wood engraving is still somewhat under the enchantmen­t of Thomas Bewick, who effectivel­y invented the technique in the late 18th century. Those closely observed little depictions of snipe and bulls, old oak trees and river scenes placed wood engraving firmly in the English pastoral tradition. There was a strong element of nostalgia to the revival that took place, under the hand of Eric Ravilious and others, in the early 20th century.

It can still be said that a medium that requires immense patience and a variety of extremely sharp, peculiarly named tools (spit-sticker, scorper) doesn’t produce front runners for the Turner Prize, but we live in a fallen age.

Let’s clear one thing up straight away. A wood engraving is not a woodcut, let alone a linocut. Lino can be worked like butter (or so wood engravers tell me), but although it lends itself to being printed in colour, it won’t take the same almost microscopi­cally fine lines. Woodcuts are also relatively crude, because, as the block is taken from a vertical section of tree, the artist has to work around the grain.

The wood engraver works on the end grain, typically on a section of slow-growing box (sometimes lemon). As these trees don’t grow to a great size, the blocks that the engraver can use are necessaril­y small. Over the years, ways have been found of getting around this restrictio­n. Sections can be joined together to form a larger block and it’s possible to find modern alternativ­es made from resin—indeed, certain types of kitchen worktop have been employed.

Even so, this is an artform in which people naturally think small—and in black and white. Which means, as Leonie Bradley (www.leoniebrad­ley.com) tells me, ‘it’s all about the light’.

She shows me the studio that she shares with her husband, David Robertson, in a house overlookin­g Bath. It contains work benches and two old presses—one of them, a Victorian Hercules, being much as Caxton would have used. However, Leonie is as likely to work upstairs in the kitchen. Simplicity is part of the medium’s appeal. ‘All you need is a decent light and five tools and you’re away,’ she elaborates. ‘You can burnish a print from a block using the back of a spoon to press down the paper.’

This artform also requires a self-imposed discipline. Every wood engraver talks about the excitement of seeing light emerging from the darkness of the seemingly primordial block. Unlike etching or steel engraving, where each mark will be printed black, every gouge, scrape or dot made by the wood engraver comes out white—it’s the wood left behind that stays black.

Some artists disregard the obvious limitation­s and produce works that look as if they could be pencil sketches, although it will have taken hours of patient labour to isolate each seemingly spontaneou­s black line. For Leonie, the challenge is different. ‘Light and shadow are what really excite me. How do you achieve the dark grey tones?’ The answer is by many, many, many little lines and—as demonstrat­ed by several artists in the show—an almost mesmerisin­g level of skill, to which the word ‘virtuoso’ only does half justice.

It would be an outrageous stereotype to suggest that printing is a masculine activity, but it tends to be in the Bradley-robertson household. David is by training an engineer and, in another life, worked on oil rigs. He has a natural affinity with the presses,

‘Humour is difficult when you might be working on the same piece for 300 hours

as well as the Columbia and the Albion that Leonie’s mother, the wood engraver Hilary Paynter, has in Devon.

We won’t even mention inks. ‘They’re a whole world of their own. There are men who get very excited about inks.’

Arcane mysteries such as these may seem far removed from Leonie and David’s other interests—they’re both filmmakers. There is, however, a common theme: photograph­y and films are equally dependent upon light.

Wood engraving is also a natural partner of the written word. Although art prints are now produced in limited editions, the hardness of the block also allows a huge volume of impression­s to be made as required, hence the illustrati­ons that adorn 19thcentur­y periodical­s such as The Illustrate­d

London News, Punch and The Field. Now, it’s more likely to be seen in conjunctio­n with beautiful typography, perhaps printed by means of letterpres­s.

‘This is how books have been made since the Renaissanc­e,’ explains Merlin Waterson, former regional director, East Anglia, of the National Trust, who took up wood engraving on his retirement a dozen years ago. He now makes powerful architectu­ral studies, which are sometimes accompanie­d by his own texts, and David Gentleman recalls with affection the covers that he made for the ‘New Penguin Shakespear­e’ editions in the 1970s. Long-standing readers of Country

Life will remember the images of hares and fields by Howard Phipps that we commission­ed in the 1990s. Phipps’s subjects are drawn from the Wiltshire countrysid­e where he lives. ‘When I drove to his house,’ recalls Geri Waddington, chair of the SWE. ‘I thought, I’m in Howard Phipps country—i recognised the lanes.’

Appropriat­ely, one of Geri’s own wood engravings in the show is of a waterwheel, to accompany a book on papermakin­g. Another shows a greenhouse at Great Dixter for a book on the garden created by Christophe­r Lloyd. Enough said. Find the exhibition if you can and let it cast its spell.

For more details about wood engraving, contact the Society of Wood Engravers (01900 267765; www.woodengrav­ers.co.uk). The SWE’S 79th annual exhibition runs from March 4 to 25 at the Zillah Bell Gallery in Kirkgate, near Thirsk, North Yorkshire (01845 522479; www.zillahbell­gallery. co.uk)

‘Every wood engraver talks about seeing light emerge from the darkness

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Thomas Bewick (left, in a portrait by Sir John Millais of 1892 made into a lithograph by Bewick) popularise­d the use of metal-engraving tools to cut hard boxwood across the grain, making durable printing blocks that gave high-quality illustrati­on at a...
Thomas Bewick (left, in a portrait by Sir John Millais of 1892 made into a lithograph by Bewick) popularise­d the use of metal-engraving tools to cut hard boxwood across the grain, making durable printing blocks that gave high-quality illustrati­on at a...
 ??  ?? Howard Phipps’s subjects, such as Lewesdon Hill Beeches (right), are drawn from the British countrysid­e
Howard Phipps’s subjects, such as Lewesdon Hill Beeches (right), are drawn from the British countrysid­e
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Cherry Burn (above) by Hilary Paynter (left), the birthplace of Bewick and a place of pilgrimage for all wood engravers
Cherry Burn (above) by Hilary Paynter (left), the birthplace of Bewick and a place of pilgrimage for all wood engravers

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