![]() The prints comprising Ten Etchings were made using one or two plates and a range of etching techniques. Doig found the layering process of colour etching sympathetic to his painting process of building up colour and image in many stages. Printing results in a further version of the image. Several versions of an image are often made in large and small paintings as well as more intimate works on paper. Doig may draw or paint on the photographs, cut them up, collage them and photocopy them (often repeatedly) before they reach their final state. The paintings were based on altered photographs, either taken himself or sourced from such media as newspapers, magazines, postcards and books. ![]() He has described the process of making the portfolio Ten Etchings as ‘a way of cataloguing some of the work I had made over the previous years’ (quoted in Elliott, p.307), referring to the paintings he made between 1992 and early 1995. It was printed at Hope Sufferance Press, London on 350gsm Zerkall paper and published by Charles Booth-Clibborn under his imprint, The Paragon Press.ĭoig had previously experimented with prints as a student at Wimbledon School of Art, London during his foundation course (1979-80) and made a few unpublished etchings in the early 1990s. The portfolio is presented in a red artist’s solander box with title and colophon pages designed by Peter B. Each print is individually signed and numbered ‘TC’ (Tate copy) by the artist. Tate’s copy is one of six additional proof sets. The portfolio was produced in an edition of thirty-five. As the title indicates, it is a suite of ten etchings. (16) Her hands rest on the desk blotter, folded neatly.Ten Etchings is Doig’s first print portfolio. ![]() (15) Her slender, sure hands are clasped together as they rest on her desk blotter. (14) He never has shown up on the police blotter, nor did he throw temper tantrums during his year in limbo. (13) Our nation's business pages bear a close resemblance to the police blotter, and investor confidence is at an all-time low. (11) ‘Yeah,’ Claire replied as she slipped his card into the desk blotter, ‘she was.’ (12) But I had made the Northfield equivalent of the police blotter. (10) The blotter on his desk is covered with sketches of the mysterious creatures Jack sees in his nightmares, there are more photos of family and friends, and a couple of magazines lying about. (9) Adele flicks her gaze at the letter opener at the edge of her leather desk blotter. (8) Use a coordinating paper to line a desk blotter. (7) All I know is he has never been considered a problem and didn't show up on the police blotter. (6) It's about the routine of the police blotter, school board debates over the luncheon menu, the fluctuation of stock prices and all the other routine minutiae of life incur complex society. (4) When reporters go beyond the police blotter and write longer stories, are they more likely to balance the traditional comments from police with comments from juvenile defendants and outside expert sources? (5) Guilt is less often seen in terms of hormones and more often in terms of morality than in other series, then, indeed, in the world as the police blotter records it. (3) It is tough to determine what exactly it is that has made him successful in his efforts to stay off the police blotter and on the basketball court. (2) A blotter, as ubiquitous then as a computer is now, sits on his desk, ready for work. (1) Ronald clasps his hands together on his desk blotter.
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