DAN WALSH
The New York painter Dan Walsh has long had parallel practices in printmaking and bookmaking. While a painter’s works on paper are often either preliminary sketches or after-the-fact reproductions, Walsh has always taken a more experimental and playful approach. In book form, he works through progressions, running his vocabulary of forms through incremental expansions and digressions, always on the watch for a new composition that might suddenly come into view. With regard to printmaking, it’s often been noted that his approach to painting has much in common with woodblock and silkscreen printing, in which layers of varying transparency are built up atop one another. Walsh applies paint to his canvases in passes, each color inverting and offsetting the ones underneath. This way of working requires a fair degree of planning crossed with a willingness to risk diversions in the moment. Perhaps it’s this combination of steadfastness and improvisation that allows Walsh to keep finding ways to evolve his structures in surprising directions.
relief prints
Title: facade
Materials: relief PRINTS ON rice paper
Size: 22” x 23 3/4”
Rarity: Limited edition of 7
Published by: the artist