Thursday, August 6, 2015

Documentation, week 22: plastic bag prints (from week 18)

As Judy recommended in my mid year report I have been experimenting with printing on different surfaces. Starting with plastic bags - the original idea that led to these works.
This was about 5 weeks ago, but I have had a lot of momentum in my project since (with the food show, etc) and haven't had time to get around to posting these images until now.

an attempt at the orange-yellow colour of biosecurity-scanned organic materials

corn and soy - 2 of the most commonly GM-ed crops (others include cotton, wheat and rice)

a more red colour, red=danger...

fluro yellow-green, radioactivity...


testing ink mixes to replicate the colours on the 'new world' bags

on the reverse of the floor bag; can you see the beans printed over the 'new world' logo? I thought the 4 green stripes (cut off by the red 'NW' band) looked like soy beans...

red corn over 'new world' - interested in the dystopia/utopia connotations of the name, 'new world'...

the previous images were printed with the bag stretched out on the textile printing table - the above image was not 'stuck' to the surface so there were some printerly, textural imperfections...

this looked interesting from the other side, faintly showing through behind the text

printing the corn over the other 'new world' label - not really visible



different 'weights' of ink

using the stencil from the grocery bags

conceptual relevance: '100% degradable bag'
(technically all plastic bags are degradable... it just takes thousands of years)
I think George was right in saying that the image is invisible. It's not at all clear enough that these are fruits and vegetables, they get lost in the colour/complexity.

grapes printed on a bottle bag