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Light Grey Art Lab
  • ART SHOP
  • ABOUT
    • About Us
    • Contact
    • CV
  • THE GALLERY
    • Group Exhibitions
    • Solo Collections
    • Featured Collections
    • Gift Shop
  • PUBLICATIONS
  • GET INVOLVED
    • Event Calendar
    • RENT + PARTNER
    • Blog
    • Podcast
    • Young Mystics
    • CALLS FOR ART

Artist Interview: Elana Schwartzman

Meet the super talented, motivated, and go-getter local artist, Elana Schwartzman. Although she is currently running her own printmaking studio, Elana actually has a background in marketing and communication. She has worked with nonprofit, for-profit, and electoral organizations and campaigns throughout the Twin Cities, with a particular emphasis on social media strategies and online development. About four years ago, she began printmaking, and since has started Fontlove, a letterpress studio working with nonprofit organizations and collaborating with other creatives! Wow! Elana is the perfect person to interview for the You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It exhibition, a show all about flexing your creative muscles, getting out there, and getting to work.

Elana Schwartzman  
 
Can you tell me a little about yourself, your background, and interests?
I am a Minneapolitan by way of the Chicago area, and I've lived here for about 13 years. My background is actually in non-profit work – while doing communications for a small organization, where I had to do everything from PR and social media to web content management and publications, I discovered that I loved graphic design. Around that same time I took a class in letterpress printing at the Minnesota Center for Book Arts – and fell stupid in love with it. Typography has always been of intense interest to me, but I also love the machinery involved in letterpress printing, and the smells and textures of things like ink and paper. I stayed in communications for several years before jumping into the deep-end and freelancing. I am self-taught and constantly worried that someone will come and strip me of my (metaphorical) graphic designer / printmaker badge. When not worrying about that (or cleaning ink off my hands) I love to walk the lakes, drink local beer, and make snarky commentary. I have been a collector for as long as I can remember, and I obsessively look for vintage objects and ephemera with the patina of everyday life. 

How did you get started in printmaking? 
 Like all kids, I was creative when I was young and unencumbered by the inhibitions of adulthood. I was a mostly solitary kid, but I took a lot of art classes. I still remember taking a printmaking class when I was 9 or 10, and how much I loved it. One of the prints I made then still hangs in my mom's bathroom. Then, I grew out of it. I felt like I didn't have natural talent (I can't draw a likeness to save my life) and I was passionate about social justice and working in a field where I could make an impact. But bit by bit, I found that I loved the parts of my job that let me be creative. The 2008 Obama campaign had a huge impact on me – I saw the power of typography, of Hoefler & Frere-Jones' Gotham typeface, to bring a movement together and inspire people. The Shepard Fairey poster that reached down and influenced many people, not just those that pay attention to graphic design or street art. I started playing around with basic relief printing in my apartment, carving linoleum, and then took the class at MCBA. I got truly addicted, buying my first press before that class even ended and haven't looked back since. I now have four vintage presses and operate a full-time letterpress and graphic design business. 

Work Sample 2

How did Fontlove begin? What was it inspired by? 
 It began in stages. At first it was just me, in my basement studio, teaching myself to print and hating everything I made while falling more and more in love with the process. It was a confusing time. Then came the "notebook stage" – I carried Field Notes notebooks around with me everywhere and jotted ideas for products I would love to make, or make up pretend schedules for what my day would look like if I quit my job to pursue this full time. There were a lot of pro/con lists, too. Then there was the "oh crap, I have all this stuff, now I should put it to use" phase. Like I said, I'm a collector, and I pretty quickly had spent a lot of money on equipment, so I got to work getting good enough to be a printer for hire. I would say that it was inspired by the obsessive need to print/make stuff. 

Most of your work is text based. What are some of your favorite phrases, words, subjects to work with?
I usually start with the typeface. Because I work with real moveable type – both metal and wood – it's not just like the endless options on your font menu on a computer. You really get to know a typeface, and understand in a physical way what it means for a font to be "condensed" or "italic" and how those are best applied to a given situation. I don't necessarily have favorite words or phrases, but I do have favorite letters. The uppercase R in the typeface Antique Extended is one of my all-time favorites, and it's one of the reasons I used it in my work for You Can Do It Put Your Back Into It. My grandfather used to say that one should "plan your work and work your plan", which I love on its own as a motivational phrase – but it also uses a lot of R's. 

Work Sample 1 What is your favorite part about traditional printing? What other materials and mediums inspire you?
Letterpress printing is a centuries-old process. I am most interested in working with the original tools of the trade – wood and metal type, old halftone cuts, borders and ornaments. That means that my work is often defined by my constraints. I can't just make the text bigger or smaller. I can't use a font I don't have. Kerning involves physically carving up the type, sawing through wood or lead. I find these constraints inspiring, and it has defined my personal style. I love the imperfections of the type and the variations in inking and texture – but it's also what I have to work with. 

What is your studio practice like?
Currently, it's a bit of organized chaos. Day to day I could be working for a client on digital graphic design, printing business cards or invitations for hire, or printing personal projects for my Etsy shop – and sometimes all three. And the reality of working for yourself is that a lot of my time I'm also replying to emails, sending proposals, and data-entering receipts. I work in the front half of a storefront studio with huge windows and lots of light. I'm a very neat person at home, but my studio tends to be an explosion of type, paper scraps, failed experiments, and bits and pieces of inspiration. I love to try new techniques, like pressure printing or experimenting with overprints – but those things rarely make their way into my work for show or sale. 

What is your biggest motivation when you are stuck on a project? 
I usually get stuck when my confidence takes a dip. So if something isn't going right – the inking is inconsistent, the impression is wonky, the registration is tough, or I'm just not liking the way it's turning out – I take a break and make something else that I know will be successful and look beautiful. I do tend to get easily demoralized, so my biggest motivation is just to remember that there will be clunkers and there will be stars, and a lot in between, and not to sweat it too hard. Unless it's a paying client, when my motivation is making sure they get the highest quality printed goods I can provide. There are no shortcuts in letterpress, really. 

Kerning Example Can you talk a little about collaboration? How do you collaborate? What is the best thing you have collaborated on? (For both person projects and Fontlove)
To me, getting to work with a wide variety of talented and passionate people is the second best part of freelancing. I'm really fortunate in my graphic design practice to work primarily with non-profit organizations that share my passions and interests, and in my letterpress work I tend to work with other creative types. Even when I'm printing someone else's design, it's a beautiful coming together of process and product. I also really love collaborating on personal projects, especially with artists that have strengths where I am weak. I made a beautiful set of cards with the artist Lisa Luck of Hello Lisa!, and got to work with artist/man about town Andy Sturdevant on an infographic for Common Roots Cafe. Both involved hand-lettering and illustration, and it was so much fun to incorporate those things into my designs when they are normally not in my wheelhouse. 
Work Sample 3
Do you have any favorite resources, books, blogs, sources for inspiration?
Too many! Present & Correct is a London-based stationery shop, but they curate a fantastic collection of vintage packaging and ephemera (much of it letterpress-printed). I have always been very inspired by maps, and I love exploring the David Rumsey Map Collection, which has a fantastic digitized archive. For excellent wood type references, I go to either the Rob Roy Kelley Collection at the University of Texas, which has uploaded and identified many specimens of wood type, or David Wolske's Letterpress Daily blog. 

What is your dream project? Something you have always wanted to make/do? 
If they would let me hang out at Hatch Show Print, that would be my dream. I could clean type, sweep the floors – whatever! They are a huge source of inspiration for me and I would love to be around that shop and absorb things by osmosis. What is the best piece of advice you ever received and why? I don't know if he would even remember telling me this, but my former boss Jeff Blodgett once told me, "Don't let the perfect be the enemy of the good." Sometimes I feel that this philosophy flies in the face of the typical M.O. for printers and artists, but if I was striving for perfection, I'd never be doing what I am doing now. I believe in getting things done and moving forward, while being true to yourself. 

Who are you inspired by? Other artists, musicians, teachers, etc. 
The list is very long. There is a select group of hugely talented letterpress printers working today, and thanks to the power of social media I get to see their work and process pop up on my phone every day. Besides my Instagram feed, one inspiration is the photographer Vivian Maier. She was an amateur street photographer whose work was never discovered or shown until a collector bought a box of undeveloped negatives from an auction house after Maier stopped paying for her storage locker, just 2 years before her death. The images are arresting, with a powerful energy, but she took them for herself and never saw most of them. There is something I like about that. I also am very inspired by sign painters, folk artists, craft beer brewers and pretty much anyone that makes things by hand in an impractically slow way in small quantities. 

Thanks, Elana!

You can see more of her work and projects at fontlovestudio.com and see her work on the Light Grey shop here

tags: 2013, Elana Schwartzman, You Can Do It, artist interview, exhibition, letterpress, light grey art lab, motivation
Wednesday 07.03.13
Posted by Jenny Bookler
 

You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It Opening Reception Recap

You Can Do It Opening Reception
Friday, June 14th was our opening reception for You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It, a collection of illustrated posters featuring words that celebrate the practice of making work: diligence, confidence, courage, and participation. It is an awesome show filled with big, beautiful, inspirational posters.

It came just days after we got back from an nice, long vacation, so we needed the energy from the show to kick us back into gear. It was fun to see visitors gravitate to the posters that jived with their personal motivations, and even shared their own words of wisdom.
You Can Do It Opening Reception
You Can Do It Opening Reception
You Can Do It Opening Reception
Thanks to all the artists involved, and everyone who came to the opening! You can see all the photos in the You Can Do It flickr set.

The artwork will be on display in the gallery until July 5th. All the artwork is for sale, and can be bought in person or from our online store. And as always, you can see the artwork now and forever in the gallery on at lightgreyartlab.com.
You Can Do It Opening Reception
tags: You Can Do It, opening reception, opening, recap
Monday 06.24.13
Posted by Chris Hajny
Comments: 2
 

Words of Advice

Whether it’s finding the strength to roll out of bed in the morning or climbing a mountain, everyone needs a little bit of motivation from time to time. Here at Light Grey Art Lab, we asked many different people all around the world to share their favorite uplifting quotes with us through our You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It show. From silly to spiritual, everyone was able to bring something exciting to the table.

At our show opening, we reached out to the community once more, and asked those who visited to give us “the best piece of advice they had received or heard.” As thanks for these extra bits of inspiration, we’re giving two lucky advice-givers a print from our show, for the best words of wisdom we received. You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It by Lindsay Nohl Here is what they said:

-Giveaway Winner-

“If you want things to change you’ve got to change direction.”
-M Weitz

-Runner Up-

“Don’t pay attention to what people say; rather, pay attention to what they do.”
-Louta

- - - - - - - - - - - - - -

“Never put things in boxes.”
-Anon

“Stay calm, and make art, even when it’s frustrating.”
-Kyle And

“Sometimes you just have to start.”
-Dana Caprio

“If you don’t want it bad enough, you don’t deserve to get it. (Roy Griak, 2007)”
-Mike Linnemann

“Dream things that never were and say why not. (Shaw)”
-Elena

“Never kill yourself. There is always an easier alternative to death.”
-Dennis

“Be content but never be satisfied.”
-Jason Loettler

“Live like a puppy would.”
-Nicole Huebner Briese

“It is more important to be happy than it is to be right. (My mother-in-law)”
-Jade Patrick

“Bet on the horse that poops last/Count to 10.”
-Steve Robbins

“Never Give Up! Trust Your Instincts! (Peppy Hare)”
-Josh Olson

“The first step to achieving your goal is showing up!”
-Anon

“No one is responsible for you. You’re responsible for yourself. Don’t feel guilty, just feel responsible.”
-Analaura

A big thanks to everyone who stopped by for the You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It opening, and congrats to M Weitz and Louta! Be sure to check out our website, and stop by our store for all the wonderful art featured in the show.
tags: Lindsay Nohl, Put Your Back Into It, You Can Do It, giveaway, inspiration, light grey art lab, phrases, quotes, words of advice
Friday 06.21.13
Posted by Jenny Bookler
 

Sneak Peek: You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It

Let's all get motivated, get back on the horse, put in some elbow grease, and sharpen those pencils!

Next Friday, is the opening reception for You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It. This is a motivational poster show featuring work by a talented group of type-loving designers and illustrators who have taken their favorite motifs, words to live by, and inspirational phrases to create large-scale art prints.

The entire space will be filled with these inspirational beauties! There will also be print give-aways, many words of encouragement, and musical jams to hype our creative enthusiasm. Hope to see you there!

The opening reception is Friday, June 14th from 7pm-10pm. 

You can see more about the opening reception on our facebook event here

Here is a sneak peek at some of the incredible work. The entire collection is available for purchase and viewing on our website and online shop.


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Love Conquers All by Taryn Gee
The Grass is Greener by Jen Mundy
Take Courage by Blok Magnaye
Reach for the Stars by Leonardo Peng
Ask For Help! by Carey Pietsch
You Will Make It Through the Night by Aimee Fleck


tags: 2013, You Can Do It, blok magnaye, carey pietsch, jen mundy, leonardo peng, light grey art lab, motivational, poster show, taryn gee
Saturday 06.08.13
Posted by Jenny Bookler
 

You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It Opening Reception

YouCanDoIt_Flier
Creatives are no stranger to late nights, long hours and the occasional moment of despair. In those moments, sometimes the only thing needed is the right words. Our newest exhibition, You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It, calls on artists to share that nugget of truth that helps them as they burn the midnight oil.

You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It opens Friday, June 14th, from 7-10 PM! Not only will there be great art, food and music, but we'll be hosting a free poster giveaway! Visitors are invited to share their favorite pearl of wisdom for a chance to win, and all entries will be collected and published online.

So if you need a little creative pick-me-up, or if you just want to see typographic posters by 32 awesome designers and illustrators, stop by and say hi!

RSVP via the Facebook event page!

Remember, the Opening Reception is Friday, June 14th from 7- 10 PM! We're located on the corner of Stevens Ave and 26th Street - right across from the Minneapolis College of Art & Design. Street parking is available on Stevens, 26th and 1st Ave.

See you there!
tags: You Can Do It, opening reception, opening
Friday 05.24.13
Posted by Chris Hajny
 

You Can Do It, Put Your Back Into It -- Artists Announced!

whoaSnow

SNOW. SO MUCH SNOW.
There's so much snow here in Minneapolis it's stupid.
I realize I'm not the only person in the universe that's ever complained about the weather, but COME ON snow!
Thank goodness I was writing a post about our upcoming motivational poster show, (You Can Do It) Put Your Back Into It -- because I'm going to need some serious motivation to get up out of bed in the morning and get myself to Light Grey.

If I were a wizard with the power to change snow to gold, I'd have 12" of gorgeous, unspoiled, puffy gold to trip over tomorrow.
But I digress...

Thanks to everyone that put your names down for this inspiring call for art!
As always, it was hard to narrow them down. We're excited to show just over 30 beautiful motivational posters in the main gallery for (You Can Do It) Put Your Back Into It opening on June 14th!

Thanks again to everyone and congratulations to everyone that is joining us!

Be on the look-out for the next call for art! It's happening SOON! Oh-So Soon!
If you're in the neighborhood, stop by Light Grey this Friday Night and say hi to us at the opening reception of the Macro & Micro show! The party starts at 7pm and goes til 10pm! It's chilly outside, so come on in and we'll warm you up!

Here are our artists!
Carey Pietsch
Bene Rohlman
sEason Wu
Elana Wolowitz Schwartzman
Madéleine Flores
Aimee Fleck
Pallavi Sen
Kelly Bastow
Danamarie Hosler
Cameron Asao
J Zachary Keenen
Jessica Roush
Amanda Hagemann
Karl Schweikart
Blok Magnaye
Jordan Sondler
Rory Philips
Leonard Peng
Chelsey Holeman
Samantha Kallis
Chris Cloud
Anika Schröder
Taylor Kristan
Marloes de Vries
Jen Mundy
John Lee
Annie Stoll
Tom Wiener
Sara Delle Fowler
Peter Steineck
Ashley Huebner
Van Tran
Taryn Gee
tags: 2013, You Can Do It, art show
Friday 04.19.13
Posted by Lindsay Nohl
 

CALL FOR ART : You Can Do It!

Youcandoit_putyourbackintoit_callforart_sm
Put your back into it!

POSTER SHOW CALL FOR ART!
Submit by April 17th!


EDIT (4.18.13) Thanks, Everyone, for submitting your names! We'll have a final list of artists announced shortly!
Thanks again!


But not just any posters! We're looking for artists and designers interested in creating gorgeous type-centric words of wisdom, encouragement and pieces with an all-around 'you can do it' flavor! Humorous, serious, inspirational or even words meant as ‘tough love’ are all fair game.

Remember that kitten poster from the early 90s? 'Hang in there?'
I used to look up at that poster on my wall and say "You're right, kitten! If you can hang in there, so can I!"

Think of all of the people you can inspire to make work, do things, keep going, and feel good about doing so!

For the duration of this show you are a drillmaster. You’re a cheerleader. You’re that Successories plaque with an eagle flying over a mountain. You can smack us in the knuckles with your ruler. Pick us up by the bootstraps and shake our shoulders until we get up and get stuff done! Yeah, we may be hard-headed, or sensitive, or lazy.... or maybe we just need a little bit of encouragement -- but we all need something telling us that we can do it if we put our backs into it. (Yes, I realize that song isn't exactly about working... but you get the idea.)

The whole month of June at Light Grey will be focused around the idea of doing more, getting things done and staying motivated. We’ve got some great lectures and topics planned for you guys.

Each poster will be hung (of course!) in our gallery in Minneapolis as well as featured online on our site, and on the shop!
The show will be happening mid-June through mid-July! (Dates to come shortly!)

So, if you’re interested in making a poster for our upcoming motivational poster-show, please put your name, email and website below by April 17th!
We'll be announcing the final list of artists after the 17th! You can do it! :)
tags: 2013, CallforArt, You Can Do It
Tuesday 04.02.13
Posted by Lindsay Nohl
Comments: 98
 

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