Antti Salokannel
Basic information
b. 1950, Lahti
Graphic Artist/Printmaker
Residence: Lahti
Contact information
Phone number: 0404128526
Email: salokannelantti@gmail.com
Artist’s Statement
Light and Image
Long stages of mezzotint technique, especially roughening the copper plate with a rocker, can be backbreakingly monotonic work.
However, personally I take roughening as a very rewarding stage in the process. During the lingering stage I have time for my own thoughts as well as for a motif of the upcoming image to develop. I feel that roughening is a kind of a ritual of transition from one stage of matter to another. It could possibly be compared to something that a painter experiences when preparing the canvas or perhaps it's got something in common with a sportsman when he's warming up for the actual performance.
A plate roughened with care will give printing result with black as deep as the night. Thus, an image is brought up by scrapening down a coarse, roughened surface of a plate.
In my mind this assimilates with the media of camera obscura. In this comparison the roughened plate represents the dark room, whereas scrapening down, or polishing, is about bringing the light in. Gradually during the process, things begin to emerge from the blackness, while some will remain out of light. There's something similar in this moment with when one’s eyes are starting to get accustomed in to the dark by trying to differentiate things from it.
The eventual graphic print is a mirror image. Likewise is the projection, formed in the rays of light that summons reflections into the "dark room".
Long stages of mezzotint technique, especially roughening the copper plate with a rocker, can be backbreakingly monotonic work.
However, personally I take roughening as a very rewarding stage in the process. During the lingering stage I have time for my own thoughts as well as for a motif of the upcoming image to develop. I feel that roughening is a kind of a ritual of transition from one stage of matter to another. It could possibly be compared to something that a painter experiences when preparing the canvas or perhaps it's got something in common with a sportsman when he's warming up for the actual performance.
A plate roughened with care will give printing result with black as deep as the night. Thus, an image is brought up by scrapening down a coarse, roughened surface of a plate.
In my mind this assimilates with the media of camera obscura. In this comparison the roughened plate represents the dark room, whereas scrapening down, or polishing, is about bringing the light in. Gradually during the process, things begin to emerge from the blackness, while some will remain out of light. There's something similar in this moment with when one’s eyes are starting to get accustomed in to the dark by trying to differentiate things from it.
The eventual graphic print is a mirror image. Likewise is the projection, formed in the rays of light that summons reflections into the "dark room".