29th june 2018
Rebecca Eelbeck expresses colour and light through printmaking. Her work has evolved from experiments during her degree where she photocopied mirrors. The results were an abstraction of the photocopier photocopying itself and a splitting of light occurred.
Rebecca has used these patterns as a starting point and begun to play around with printing these splits of light. The CMYK process is used to illustrate and repeat these abstractions to produce a colour spectrum in printed form. Rebecca is also interested in how light and colour can be represented through pixels, this is why a grid pattern can be found in a lot of her pieces.
Print's processes and constraints are very in important in Rebecca's work as they dictate how the images will evolve. This has allowed the images to change naturally through playing with process. One of the processes Rebecca is particularly interested in is being able to take a mono print with unique qualities and reproduce it through screen printing.
@REBECCAEELBECK
Rebecca has used these patterns as a starting point and begun to play around with printing these splits of light. The CMYK process is used to illustrate and repeat these abstractions to produce a colour spectrum in printed form. Rebecca is also interested in how light and colour can be represented through pixels, this is why a grid pattern can be found in a lot of her pieces.
Print's processes and constraints are very in important in Rebecca's work as they dictate how the images will evolve. This has allowed the images to change naturally through playing with process. One of the processes Rebecca is particularly interested in is being able to take a mono print with unique qualities and reproduce it through screen printing.
@REBECCAEELBECK