John Robshaw Prints
eBook - ePub
Available until 23 Dec |Learn more

John Robshaw Prints

Textiles, Block Printing, Global Inspiration, and Interiors

  1. 176 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub
Available until 23 Dec |Learn more

John Robshaw Prints

Textiles, Block Printing, Global Inspiration, and Interiors

About this book

Design enthusiasts and armchair travelers will love circling the globe with celebrated textile designer John Robshaw. From batiks in Java to ikats in Thailand and indigo printing in India, Robshaw reveals the lush inspiration behind his signature style while highlighting step-by-step block printing techniques from local artisans and masters. Robshaw provides a rare glimpse into his creative process, wherein he blends traditional methods with his own painterly style for entirely unique creations, and shares tips for incorporating textiles into any space. Brimming with beautiful photographs of covetable textiles, far-flung destinations, and eye-catching interiors, this luxe fabric-covered book is an eclectic visual tour of the rich tradition of textile printing.

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Yes, you can access John Robshaw Prints by John Robshaw,Elizabeth Garnsey in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Design & Fashion Design. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

eBook ISBN
9781452139494
Topic
Design
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TEXTILE PRINTING

ā€œYou must know that the pepper-trees are cultivated, being regularly planted and watered; and the pepper is gathered in the months of May, June, and July. They have also abundance of very fine indigo. This is made of a certain herb which is gathered, and is put into great vessels upon which they pour water and then leave it till the whole of the plant is decomposed. They then put this liquid in the sun, which is tremendously hot there, so that it boils and coagulates, and becomes such as we see it.ā€
—Marco Polo, THE TRAVELS OF MARCO POLO, translated by Henry Yule
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Block carvers in Sanganer.
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Note how delicately the printer lines up the block before he stamps.
If they could, every one of my textiles would pipe up with a story. And not just a single story, but an interwoven narrative about a particular trip to a distant country, and the people I meet there, the ideas they inspire, and the techniques they are generous enough to teach me. Wherever I travel, whether to India or Thailand, Indonesia or Nepal, I draw from the visual art and music and languages I hear, as much as from the overgrown exotic gardens and ancient temples I see, and the religious festivals and the Bollywood mayhem of the street life I negotiate, to make new prints. But it is the traditional printing methods I’ve learned along the way that have unleashed countless new ideas. They are what have opened up unexpected new directions for me as I have grown as an artist and designer; I’ve just stumbled in, the way local taxicabs careen left or right—or seemingly both at the same time—but you can’t predict the direction, so you just have to jump into the void.
My travels have introduced me to dozens of indigenous printing techniques, but a few have become central to my collections over the years. Block printing became my teacher and my muse, and my temperamental mistress. I was drawn to it the first time I saw it done in India, and I fell in love with it—and with India, too. If my personality were an art form, I would be block printing. The rhythm and method allow for all kinds of free-form ideas and random action. Any missteps or confusion can become instead an innovation, a new style. The beauty of block printing’s exactitude is equal to the fun of its malleability. Many of the photos in this chapter provide a glimpse into the expertise of the printers and artisans with whom I work in India, along with a step-by-step illustration of how block printing gets done.
I am indebted to all of my friends in India whom I have had the pleasure (and pain, at times) to work with over the years and to learn from and grow with. To say the least, it has not always been easy—though I have enjoyed our tussles, brawls, and near misses. On the other hand, I have been on the receiving end of their amazing hospitality, their insights, and their support as partners and friends.
A few other techniques I incorporate into my collections but don’t rely on, because of technical challenges, are the batiking I learned in Yogyakarta, Indonesia; mud printing with natural indigo, which I attempted in Bagru, India; and ikat weaving in Isaan, Thailand, where I merely watched, mesmerized, as the looms swayed back and forth. But elements of all of these, along with block printing, are what come together to form my hybrid, eccentric designs that are at once ancient and modern, time-honored and original—for better or for worse!

Block Printing

Some scholars believe block printing originated in India as early as 3000 B.C.E., but no actual textiles or blocks that old have survived. Printed textiles were used in parts of the Caucasus Mountains around 2000 B.C.E. And Herodotus (450 B.C.E.) makes reference in his histories to peoples from the same region who painted animal figures on their clothing, while Strabo, who lived from 63 B.C.E. to 20 C.E. in what is now Turkey, documents Indian printed textiles. And in the first century C.E., Pliny the Elder alludes to the painting and dyeing of textiles. Archeologists in Egypt uncovered the earliest known block-printed fabric, a fourth-century child’s tunic in white linen, stamped with blue star-shaped designs in a diamond pattern.
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A quilt in progress being stamped with my ā€œHedgeā€ print, Spring 2010.
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Chipping away at a block for my ā€œDarterā€ print.
But many scholars believe it was in India where the practice of printing fabrics was perfected, as early as the twelfth century, and it was Indian craftsmen who elevated it to the world-renowned art form it became by about the seventeenth century. That was when families of artisans called chhipas (literally, people who stamp or print) settled in the town of Bagru, about thirty-five kilometers east of Jaipur. There, by the river Sanjaria, generation after generation perfected and perpetuated the art of block printing; in many cases, to this day, Bagru printers have managed to preserve the use of natural dyes in spit...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title
  3. Copyright
  4. Contents
  5. Introduction
  6. Textile Printing
  7. A Brief History
  8. Setting Up Shop
  9. Marking My Way
  10. Bringing it Home
  11. Selections from John Robshaw’s Library
  12. Textile Museums
  13. Index
  14. Acknowledgments
  15. Photography Credits
  16. About the Author