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Archive for August, 2009

The Benefits of Photographic and Inkjet Printing

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

A familiar conversation among photographic artists is whether to choose photographic or inkjet when printing your digital files. The main concerns are archival quality, collectability and aesthetics.

At the Colour Factory we have a Light Jet (a brand name for a digital laser exposing enlarger) for printing true, continuous tone photographs. The digital image is exposed to the paper by a laser and then developed in a wet chemical process (the same as analogue) to create a Chromogenic (C-type) print. They look, feel and act like familiar analogue photographs, and come in a small variety of surfaces- gloss, lustre, matte, metallic, flex (super gloss) and duratran (backlit).

Our inkjet printer is an Epson 11880, with which we can print onto a wide variety of museum grade substrates and a small range of commercial papers (see list below). Fine art inkjet prints look and feel like art papers, such as heavyweight cotton rag, textured watercolour and canvas etc. A benefit of this process is that you can print to a large variety of surfaces whereas in museum grade substrates you are limited to a satin or matte finish. The aesthetic difference between a traditional dye-based, resin coated photograph and a pigmented ink, heavyweight art paper print, may greatly affect your choice between inkjet and Light Jet*.

Some other things to consider…

It is in the tonal quality of the print where C-type shines. In terms of colour gamut and shadow detail, chromogenic prints have a greater range of colours and more colour separation in the blacks (especially on non-matte papers). However, inkjet media does provide good highlight separation.

C-type prints are tough, don’t kink, scuff or scratch easily. They roll well, although do have a ‘memory’ if stored incorrectly for some time. On the other hand, inkjet prints are quite sensitive and need to be handled carefully. The paper surface is easily scuffed and rolls with the emulsion out (unlike Light Jet) which can cause difficulties when trying to roll a print. The Colour Factory recommends flat packing your inkjet prints and are currently researching the availability of hardened papers.

On the tricky topic of archival quality, the most superior method depends on your information source. The archival quality myth is purely an intercompany debate and as the situation stands inkjet technology has not been around long enough for testing to be proven accurate. The Wilhelm Imaging Research Company is seen as leaders in the field of testing archival permanence. However, other companies such as Kodak dispute its accelerated testing methods (of chromogenic prints), and as a result are missing from their data findings. C-type prints have withstood the test of time and have state of the art print life longevity – 100 years in typical home storage, 200 years in typical dark storage. Inkjet prints are believed to be equally as archival.

* When choosing a print media, people often touch the surface of the inkjet or photographic papers and choose according to a tactile response. However, photography is a visual medium, so it is important to consider the tonal qualities of the image on the paper when making your decision. One should also consider the conceptual reasons for choosing a particular aesthetic. How does your choice of medium enhance your image, what are the positive and negatives?

List of Materials

We are willing to stock and supply unique materials. Currently available choices are (but not limited to):

Fine Art Pigment Inkjet printing

Museum Grade Art papers

Hahnemuhle Photorag 308gsm
Breathing Colour Smooth 300gsm
Breathing Colour Velvet 310gsm
Arches Natural Textured 240gsm
Arches White Textured 240gsm
Kodak Fine Art Smooth Paper
Kodak Fine Art Textured Paper
Kodak Fine Art Coated Matte Paper

Museum Grade Canvas

Canson Museum canvas 440gsm
Breathing Colour Canvas 20.5mil
Kodak Artist’s Semi Gloss Canvas 20mil

Museum Grade Fibre Base Papers

Ilford Gold Fibre Silk 310gsm
Harmon Fibre base paper 320gsm
Crane & Co. Museo silver rag 300gsm
Kodak Fine Art Fibre Satin Paper

Commercial Pigment Printing

Ilford Omni jet White Film 7mil
Ilford Omni jet Satin RC
Kodak Matte Canvas 19mil
Kodak Premium Backlit Film 7mil
Kodak Premium Photographic Satin 180g
Kodak Premium Photographic Glossy 180g
Kodak Premium Rapid Dry Lustre 260g

Light Jet (and Projection) Printing

Museum Grade Photographic papers

Kodak Endura N Matte
Kodak Endura E Lustre
Kodak Endura F Gloss
Kodak Endura Metallic
Fuji Crystal Archive Flex
Kodak Endura Duratran

The Opening Night of the CCP/Colour Factory Award

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

The opening night of the CCP/Colour Factory Award exhibition was a fantastic night.

Colour Factory Award winner Clare Rae

Colour Factory Award winner Clare Rae

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Colour Factory director Phill Virgo and Centre for Contemporary Photography director Naomi Cass, presenting the award

Colour Factory Director Phill Virgo and Centre for Contemporary Photography Director Naomi Cass presenting the award

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Fine Art Photographic Exhibitions

Wednesday, August 26th, 2009

Head Land
Chantal Faust
Jenny Port Gallery

Opening night 2 September 6 – 8pm

2 – 26 September 2009

The images for this exhibition have been created without a camera and continue her work with a flatbed scanner as an image-making machine. Where the lens-based camera requires distance in order to see, the eye of the scanner demands immediate proximity. These images use this guise of apparent closeness as a means to explore changing notions of looking and desire associated with the contemporary viewing of photographs. The Colour Factory team worked with Chantal to print this series of fine art photographs for exhibition, and look forward to joining her at the opening night.

Soft Freeze
Sarah Berners
Area Contemporary Art Space Inc.
Opening night August 28 6-8pm

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28 August – 13 September 2009

Victorian College of the Arts, Master of Fine Art candidate Sarah Berners opens her solo exhibition ‘Soft Freeze’ this Friday. Her large pristine photographs have a high fashion aesthetic and an invitingly sumptuous surface. Her imagery explores notions of the artificial and the abject as they intersect within pop culture representations. As printers of these fine art photographs, the team at the Colour Factory has had a sneak preview, and we are excited about seeing them installed.

Light at the End of the Camera

Monday, August 24th, 2009

Over the next week or so one fantastic photographic exhibition will close while another opens.

Ballarat International Foto Biennale
4 September – 4 October

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The BIFB evolved from the Daylesford Foto Biennale. After two successful festivals, the BIFB has outgrown the capacity of Daylesford, to continue the exponential growth of Australia’s most vibrant, exciting, engaging photographic event.

The core exhibition program is spread over seven venues and hosts selected work from 18 national and international photographers. The fringe exhibition program is open entry and presents an eclectic mix of all styles and genres of photography. There are also many other stimulating events taking place such as the projection program, photography workshops, seminars and portfolio reviews. A must see for all photographers and photography lovers.

Light at the End of the Camera
Obscura Gallery
Ilona Nelson, Ben Ali Long, Leah Robertson, Joshua Hakman

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LAST DAYS – Until September 1st

“Amidst the stark and sometimes tedious facets of daily life, Ilona Nelson, Ben Ali Ong, Leah Robertson and Joshua Hakman all see Light at the end of the Camera. This group show explores contrasting interactions with the outer world, as experienced by four contemporary photographers”.

Recycled Art: Environmentally Friendly Inspiration

Tuesday, August 18th, 2009

These exhibitions give recycled art a whole new meaning with waste being turned into artists’ work.

Ash Keating
Utopian Slumps
Label Land

Opening Friday 21st August 6 -9pm

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In a three-month residency in Seoul, Ash Keating enlisted the help of several art students in the collecting of waste and melding it into sculptural costumes. A series of ‘interventions’ were then performed in the streets outside sporting and fashion wear shops, with a clear message: ‘The Rubbish is taking over!’

The Colour Factory worked with Ash to produce this series of artist prints and look forward to joining him at the opening. The exhibition runs from 22 August – 5th September.

TS2 – Incinerator Arts Complex, Moonee Ponds
Slow Art Collective: Chaco Kato, Ash Keating, Dylan Martorell and Tony Adams

17 August – 13 September

Opening: Saturday 5 September 2 – 4pm

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Increasingly aware of their ecological footprint, contemporary artists are investigating more sustainably responsible art practices. Using a large quantity of salvaged, domestic and industrial materials from the neighboring Moonee Valley Transfer Station, the TS2 project explores the creative possibilities within an artistic context.

Artist Chaco Kato was the aRtECYCLE 2008 winner and will be the Incinerator Artist in Residence for the duration of this contemporary art exhibition.

Art Exhibitions Galore at Blindside This Week

Monday, August 10th, 2009

Two particularly interesting art exhibitions are opening this Thursday at Blindside. One explores the dying art of the Polaroid photograph following its announcement in early 2008 that production of its instant film would cease by the end of the year. The other is from Clare Rae, winner of the 2009 Colour Factory Award.

Last Days Polaroid Sale
Blindside
Opening Thursday 13, 6 – 8pm

Curated by David Mutch

David Sebastian Brown, Adam John Cullen, Michael Danischewski, Zoey Louise Moonbeam Dawson, Dave DeCarteret, Jo Duck, Charlotte Ghaie, Theresa Harrison, Nils Olle Oskar Holmberg, Kirsty Hulm, Devon Lang Wilton, David Mutch, Bridget Radomski, Hannah Lucy Alice Schiefelbein, Jacob Weiss & Andrew T. Møller

polaroid

In early 2008 Polaroid announced that production of its instant film would cease by the end of the year. In Last Days, with the knowledge that the Polaroid is an endangered object, we enact the frantic urgency of a ‘closing down’ sale. Here the Polaroid is available for cheap consumption; 500+ priced between 50c and $10. These are instant photos for instant consumerist satisfaction and at bargain prices!

They are soon-to-be relics of an analogue past mimicking the fast pace of this digital age where images are created, consumed, conflated, and added to the pile of visual detritus. The Polaroids in Last Days partake in the devaluation of the image that has occurred since mechanical reproduction became possible, and certainly since the digital image was conceived.

The Chase
Blindside
Clare Rae

the-chase
Also opening at Blindside this Thursday is the Colour Factory Award winner, Clare Rae’s video work ‘The Chase’.

New Platform Gallery Art Exhibition – Art in a Subway

Tuesday, August 4th, 2009

Dominic Kavanagh
Platform Artist Group: Vitrine Space
Opening Night Friday 7 August 6-8pm

The exhibition will run from August 3 to 28, 2009 in the ‘Vitrine’space, the largest cabinet space in the subway that houses the Platform Gallery.

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Centre for Contemporary Photography
Clare Rae
Climbing the walls and other actions
7 August – 27 September

Photographic prints from the winner of the 2009 Colour Factory Award, Clare Rae, will be displayed at the CCP, Gallery 2. Phill Virgo, Director of the Colour Factory, will open the exhibition entitled ‘Climbing the walls and other actions’ this Thursday night, August 6.

Clare Rae’s work was selected from a large number of entrants from around the country by judges: Milton Harris, Collector, Contemporary Art; David Rosetzky, Artist and Phill Virgo, Director, Colour Factory.

The current CCP exhibitions also contain artist works from Tracey Moffat, Anne Ferran, Laith McGregor, Emil Toonen and the finalists in this year’s CCP Documentary Photography Award (see below image).