Featured Artist Elizabeth Busey

Printmaker Elizabeth Busey’s linoleum linocuts feature patterns found in nature, on both large and intimate scales. Enjoy more of her beautiful artwork by visiting her website.

 

“Ambrosia” Reduction Linocut, 28” x 28” by artist Elizabeth Busey. See her portfolio by visiting www.ArtsyShark.com

“Ambrosia” Reduction Linocut, 28” x 28”

 

For a person whose work is all about patterns in nature, my printmaking has relied tremendously on both modern and old-fashioned technology. Having my Iphone camera with me at all times has allowed me to capture ephemeral imagery, like ripples and reflections in water or rapidly separating clouds.

 

“Hope Despite the Evidence “ Reduction Linocut, 17” x 25” by artist Elizabeth Busey. See her portfolio by visiting www.ArtsyShark.com

“Hope Despite the Evidence “ Reduction Linocut, 17” x 25”

 

Other times I rely on Google Earth to soar about the planet, looking for geological features that move me. Only occasionally do I have the luxury of holding a specimen in my hands as I create – like the green and purple redbud leaves from my yard.

 

“An Echo of Beginnings” Reduction Linocut with Gold Leaf, 27” x 14” by artist Elizabeth Busey. See her portfolio by visiting www.ArtsyShark.com

“An Echo of Beginnings” Reduction Linocut with Gold Leaf, 27” x 14”

 

Have you ever noticed that macro and microscopic patterns repeat themselves? Those veins in your hands mirror the drainages in the land around you. Or the way clouds and bubbles on water separate in just the same way? There are of course scientific explanations for many phenomena, but as a layperson, I prefer to experience these as a cosmic familiarity, a way of knowing about the world in its totality.

 

“In Celebration of Thin Places” Reduction Linocut, 17” x 25” by artist Elizabeth Busey. See her portfolio by visiting www.ArtsyShark.com

“In Celebration of Thin Places” Reduction Linocut, 17” x 25”

 

Each linocut is created using one a block of linoleum in the reduction method. I chose linoleum, rather than wood, because so often my subject matter requires curves, rather than straight lines.

 

“To Whom Much is Given” Reduction Linocut, 25” x 17” by artist Elizabeth Busey. See her portfolio by visiting www.ArtsyShark.com

“To Whom Much is Given” Reduction Linocut, 25” x 17”

 

Linoleum, because it does not have a grain, is a perfect matrix for my work. I purchase my linoleum in rolls, mount sections of it on MDF, and create any size block that I require.

 

“Righteousness as a Mighty Stream” Reduction Linocut, 25” x 40” by artist Elizabeth Busey. See her portfolio by visiting www.ArtsyShark.com

“Righteousness as a Mighty Stream” Reduction Linocut, 25” x 40”

 

I use Japanese woodblock tools made of highly refined steel to carve many of my images. I also use a Foredom drill with a flexible shaft. Here I employ engraving bits to create areas of texture and randomness. The block is carved in stages, first removing the places that must be white. Then small areas of the block are carved away, and each stage is printed with either transparent or opaque oil-based ink on cotton rag paper.

 

“Tranquil Terraces Dawning” Reduction Linocut, 10” x 33” by artist Elizabeth Busey. See her portfolio by visiting www.ArtsyShark.com

“Tranquil Terraces Dawning” Reduction Linocut, 10” x 33”

 

I begin with only a general sketch of the imagery I want to explore. Each new layer of color dictates my subsequent carving and the next color to be added. With this method, I create colors that I could not have imagined myself. The printmaker’s “Aha!” moment when the paper is peeled off the block for the last time is addicting.

 

“Yielding Gracefully” Reduction Linocut, 17” x 25” by artist Elizabeth Busey. See her portfolio by visiting www.ArtsyShark.com

“Yielding Gracefully” Reduction Linocut, 17” x 25”

 

I create my linocuts in my basement studio in Bloomington, Indiana, on an etching press my husband built from recycled steel well pipes. This old-fashioned technology provides the pressure to print eight to ten layers of ink on each linocut in a series. Who knew that a printing press could be such a meaningful and romantic gift?

 

“Renaissance at Mossy River” Reduction Linocut, 14” x 22” by artist Elizabeth Busey. See her portfolio by visiting www.ArtsyShark.com

“Renaissance at Mossy River” Reduction Linocut, 14” x 22”

 

I see the images I create as modern-day messages. In the past, humans chose to express their community values through stone carvings, or churches with stained glass.

 

Artist Elizabeth Busey in her studio by artist Elizabeth Busey. See her portfolio by visiting www.ArtsyShark.com

Artist Elizabeth Busey in her studio

 

Today, messages are often experienced more personally. It is my hope that the images I create will speak directly to people’s unconscious, reminding them of their love for this world, and their responsibility for protecting the beauty that exists all around them.

 

Artist Elizabeth Busey invites you to follow her on Facebook and Instagram.

 

 

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Comments

  1. I love Elizabeth’s work and am thrilled to see it here on your site, Carolyn. Thanks for sharing it with more people.

  2. Adele Castillo says

    I love seeing Elizabeth featured here. Her work is fascinating and captures her joy in and love for our Mother Earth.

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