Today’s theme is block prints of London, and I’m sticking with the iconic sights. This first one, by Abigail Daker, covers all the bases with all the famous skyline elements from St Pauls and Big Ben to the Gherkin and London Eye. Everything’s stacked up cheek by jowl, not laid out the way it is in real life or any way you could possibly see it; it’s a London sundae. I especially love the way the background is patterned.
Big Ben returns in this second piece, by Katie Jo Heiner Shupe, along with some of London’s smaller icons: a telephone box and a double decker bus. This one is capturing a particular specific scene. I like the details of every stone of the sidewalk and the building framing the picture on the left, and the textured clouds in the sky.
By contrast, here’s a piece with sparser lines and lots of white space depicting the Tower of London by Lance Duffin. It may be simple, but it captures all the necessary details so that its subject is instantly recognizable.
We couldn’t possibly depict London without the Underground, so here’s the Piccadilly Station entrance with its iconic round symbol, and the statue on the Shaftesbury Memorial Fountain in the background. Fun fact: although usually called Eros, the statue was originally intended to depict Anteros, Eros’s little brother and god of requited love. As for the block print, by John Gledhill, it’s especially interesting in not putting white outlines around the various black objects, including the posts flanking the underground entrance and the man’s suit and briefcase.
And finally, a juxtaposition of old and new: St Paul’s Cathedral and the Millenium Bridge, by Susan Short. This one has an interesting depiction of the shadow of the bridge’s cables falling across its pier and the Thames below, but perhaps the most interesting thing is that it’s printed on paper that has a subtle wood grain pattern. This makes a lovely, pale, slightly rosy sky in the large blank area that emphasizes our low viewpoint.
So, five cool views of the city of London, five artists, five different icons on which to focus, with different styles, different levels of detail and texture. (It's also interesting that 4/5 are in vertical rather than "landscape" format.) What fun!
[Pictures: Central London Skyline and Landmarks, linocut print by Abigail Daker (Image from the artist’s Etsy shop abidaker);
London, linocut print by Katie Jo Heiner Shupe (See the artist’s Etsy Shop BonVoyart);
Tower of London, linocut by Lance Duffin, 2018 (Image from Flickr);
Piccadilly III, linocut by John Gledhill, c 2014 (Image from the artist’s web site.)
St Pauls & Millenium Bridge, woodcut by Susan Short (Image from the artist’s web site.)]
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