So I’m an artist living in San Francisco, I’m a painter, illustrator, armature photographer and dancer, all self taught (except for in dance). Most of my paintings are spread throughout friend and family’s homes, in which only a select few have actually been sold. Of course my goal in painting was never to make a living by selling, but rather to experience the pure enjoyment and therapeutic practices of creating artwork that I love and surrounding myself with it. “Why buy expensive art when I can make my own” – Piero Milani
However last year I created an entire multi media work, that many friends enjoyed which, got me thinking about reproduction for the first time. Made from scratch using a wooden frame, chicken wire, adhesive, paper, acrylic paint, graphite and charcoal. It’s about 4’x4’ and 3” thick entitled “drop”. The subject: a hand dropping a heart. Everyone who came across it seemed to enjoy and appreciate “drop”, so much so that on two separate occasions passer bys even asked about the work when it was displayed at the top of our stair case in plain view. So I thought, maybe this is a good time to create a print, since I myself couldn’t part with the original.
I contacted Mark Brady, a professional photographer and print maker based in the Portrero Hill area. He recommended that we take a photograph instead of performing a scan, because not only was “drop” too big for even a large scanner, but the glass on a scanner wouldn’t be able to get the most crisp and precise capture which only a lens of a high digital res camera can. I left the painting with Mark, and he snapped a photograph, cleaned it up (cropping and adding color correction so that the file matched the painting exactly). And then he consulted me on sizes, paper quality and textures. We pow-wowed back and forth, both of us with our ideas and recommendations.
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