4 minute read
INDELIBLE IMPRINT
BY PEGIE STARK
In an unassuming building next to the University of South Florida’s Tampa campus, a small sign says: GRAPHICSTUDIO. Open the door, and you’ll see rooms full of prints, photos, collages and sculptures. Here, a print by Robert Rauschenberg, the late great contemporary artist. There, a photo by Robert Mapplethorpe, famed for his provocative portraits. On display, a Diana Al-Hadid sculpture.
In 2006, choreographer Trisha Brown used her feet to make “Compass,’’ a softground etching with relief roll, at Graphicstudio at the University of South Florida in Tampa. Each piece in the edition of 35 is $1,200. Photos by Will Lytch, Graphicstudio
Artist Alex Katz did this woodcut and lithograph, called “Tree 8,” in collaboration with Graphicstudio. The edition of 60 is currently in production, with price on request.
“Founding Grounds,” a cast bronze sculpture with applied patina, was made by Syrian artist Diana Al-Hadid last year at Graphicstudio. Price on request for the one-of-a-kind piece.
It quickly becomes obvious that this is not just another classroom or administrative office. It is the home of an actual “atelier,” or printmaking studio, one of the most renowned on an American university campus. This is where printers make limited editions of artworks, display them and sell them around the world.
Opened in 1968, Graphicstudio was the brainchild of Dr. Donald Saff, then dean of the College of Fine Arts. The idea: create a space where artists, printers and fabricators could collaborate on projects, share ideas and experiment with techniques. Since its inception, the studio has worked with about 100 contemporary artists — both worldrenowned and emerging on the art scene — and produced more than 1,000 limited editions and objects.
Collaboration remains the studio’s driving force. “Artists are encouraged to expand their practice and use printmaking to make art that is experimental and transgressive,” said Margaret Miller, the studio’s director since 2001.
On the credenza in Miller’s office is a small sculpture of a spider and web. It is the work of Louise Bourgeois, known for her enormous spider sculptures that soar above building fronts around the world. “Spider Home,” the piece Miller has, was among an edition of six that Bourgeois created with the Graphicstudio team in 2002. The sculptures were priced at $125,000 on their release — one recently sold for $300,000. (Miller said most artworks are available for well under $5,000 and some for a few hundred dollars.)
Rauschenberg, who lived in Florida, began working with Graphicstudio at its start. Other famous artists in its roster include Chuck Close, Judy Chicago, Roy Lichtenstein, James Rosenquist, Ed Ruscha and Kiki Smith.
Miller’s job is extensive. In addition to managing the studio, she finds the artists to collaborate with, gives presentations about collecting art, serves as director and curator of USF’s Contemporary Art Museum and also directs its Institute for Research and Public Art program. She is especially interested in getting art out into the community.
Public art — murals, interactives videos and other forms meant for public view — can “engage people in an experience who might never visit a museum,” Miller said. One example is “Florida Sunset,” a large mosaic at Tampa International Airport created by New York multimedia artist Jason Middlebrook. Although he did the mosaic independently, he has worked with Graphicstudio on other pieces.
Jason Middlebrook’s “My Banyan Branch,” done in 2019 at Graphicstudio, is a screenprint and handpainting on banyan wood. The unique sculpture is $30,000. Photos by Will Lytch, Graphicstudio
Miller travels widely, visiting exhibitions, galleries and events like the Venice Biennale and Art Basel Miami Beach to look for emerging artists. She does her own research to find good candidates, and selects artists based on where they are in their careers. Can Graphicstudio help expand their practice? Can it give them the opportunity to experiment in a medium they are not used to?
Artists chosen to collaborate with the Graphicstudio team are required to be in residence at the studio for a specified period so they can work with the printers directly. This allows the artists and the team to experiment with both familiar and unfamiliar mediums. For example, an artist might want to print on a material other than paper, add objects to the prints, combine various techniques or even depart from the usual medium and try something different like sculpture.
Tom Pruitt is Graphicstudio’s master printer and studio manager. There are five other printers, all of whom are capable of not only making limited print editions, but also incorporating 3D elements into the prints. Graphicstudio is currently printing artwork by Alex Katz, who just had a retrospective exhibition at Manhattan’s Solomon R. Guggenheim
Museum. Katz, in his 90s, came to Florida to work with Pruitt’s team on two prints: “Tree 8,” a wood cut and lithograph, and “Tree 10,” both in editions of 60.
Among others who have collaborated with Graphicstudio is choreographer Trisha Brown. She used her feet to create a series called “Compass,” making footprints on copper plates from which the prints were made.
Diana Al-Hadid, a Syrian artist living in Brooklyn, recently worked with Graphicstudio to make sculptures based on the human form. The studio’s support “comes at a point in my practice in which I am eager to develop ideas I would ordinarily be unable to explore in my own studio,” she said. “The work I am creating at Graphicstudio would surely not have been possible to realize, and quite likely improbable to conceptualize, without their assistance.”
Upcoming collaborations include one with Rico Gatson, a multidisciplinary artist who sculpts, paints, draws and makes videos. “Graphicstudio has a long storied history of having worked with some of the most important artists of our times,” said Gatson, some of whose work is on view at USF’s art museum. “It’s an enormous opportunity and I’m so excited to see what we produce.’’
The studio will also be working with Superflex, a Danish collective of three artists — Jakob Fenger, Rasmus Nielsen and Bjorn Christiansen — who specialize in public and experimental art. And it hopes to get conceptual artist Tavares Strachan, who recently won a MacArthur genius grant.
Graphicstudio is subsidized by multiple sources — grants, sales, donations, consulting fees and a few salaries paid by the College of Arts. Under a new program starting this fall, donors can get three prints in exchange for a contribution to the studio’s research mission.
Buy Or Visit
On May 20, from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., prints from the collection will be on display and for sale. Graphicstudio, 3702 Spectrum Blvd., No. 100, Tampa, is open to the public for tours or individual appointments. Email gsoffice@usf.edu or call 813-974-3503.