S L / \ S H embodiment, liminality, and epistemology in relief printmaking through the linocut process
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Abstract
It is the aim of this practice-led PhD to explore the processes that attend to the
production of a linocut relief print through a framework whose key concepts are
liminality and embodiment. In this pursuit the thesis investigates the subjects of skin
and surface as well as cuts and cutting through themes and issues of touch and time
that include connection and continuity, ‘direct’ creative touch, artist-tool/technology
relations, memory, repetition and rhythmicity, transmissions of time, translation,
tracking, chronology and equivalence. These subjects and themes’ liminal qualities
and characteristics are mirrored by a methodology devised and employed
throughout the research. This methodology employs the interpenetrative,
interconnected, reflexive and autoethnographic methods of a durational, physically
challenging repeat printmaking project, longhand letter writing, and the multiple-register
writing of this thesis. It does so in a purposely oblique and ‘wayfaring’ (Tim
Ingold, 2011) approach. Binaries and boundaries are thus explored without risking
their further enforcement, allowing diverse aspects and subjects to flow into and
between one another with the freedom to contrast, contradict, and manifest
inconsistently whilst ultimately moving towards a more comprehensive
understanding of the thesis’ subjects. This liminal methodology contributes a set of
research tools and framework propositions to the existing field of research in and of
creative practice, including printmaking, and its embodiment.
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