Skip to main content
Want more images or videos?
Request additional images or videos from the seller
1 of 9

Birgit Blyth
In Memory Of #14 (Abstract Monoprint)

2017

About the Item

Unique chromoskedasic monoprint on photographic paper 22 x 18 inches framed This contemporary, abstract style chromoskedasic monoprint was created by experimental photographer Birgit Blyth. Without the use of a camera, the artist produced this chromoskedasic image by applying the photographic chemicals to black and white photo pager and exposing it to light. The rich ivory, coffee, mahogany, and black tones are determined by the different chemicals used and the amount of time they are exposed to light. Here, the artist paints with the photographic materials in a gestural, elliptical motion that spans the page. The photograph is complimented with a black metal frame with non-glare glass. It is equipped with sturdy wire on the back for instant and professional quality hanging. About the artist and work: Birgit Blyth is one of our most innovative and prolific photographers who works in a darkroom yet uses no camera! Blyth has been experimenting with a technique known as Chromoskedasic painting since the early ‘90s and variations on this concept have been shown at the gallery for the last 20 years. The unusual process involves the use of silver particles in black and white photographic paper to scatter light at different wavelengths when exposed. A chemist of sorts, Blyth demonstrates a thorough knowledge of how the various photographic chemicals will react when applied to paper and exposed. Each work is unique with palettes that resonate brilliant tonalities of brown, green, black, and purple. Using this technique, Blyth creates abstract crosshatching grids and most recently has developed a more gestural series of 20 x 16 inch chromoskedasic paintings that explores the ethereal qualities made possible by the unconventional material. Birgit Blyth succeeds at keeping her work fresh and cutting-edge using analog methods that are being quickly replaced elsewhere with digital technology.
More From This SellerView All
  • In Memory Of #10 (Abstract Monoprint)
    By Birgit Blyth
    Located in Hudson, NY
    Unique chromoskedasic monoprint on photographic paper 22 x 18 inches framed This contemporary, abstract style chromoskedasic monoprint was created by experimental photographer Birgi...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Monoprint

  • In Memory Of #11 (Abstract Monoprint)
    By Birgit Blyth
    Located in Hudson, NY
    Unique chromoskedasic monoprint on photographic paper 22 x 18 inches framed This contemporary, abstract style chromoskedasic monoprint was created by experimental photographer Birgi...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Monoprint

  • In Memory Of #9
    By Birgit Blyth
    Located in Hudson, NY
    Chromoskedasic monoprint 22 x 18 inches framed This contemporary, abstract style chromoskedasic monoprint was created by experimental photographer Birgit Blyth. Without the use of a...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Monoprint

  • In Memory Of #5
    By Birgit Blyth
    Located in Hudson, NY
    Chromoskedasic monoprint 15 x 12 inches framed 10 x 8 inches unframed This contemporary, abstract style chromoskedasic monoprint was created by experimental photographer Birgit Blyt...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Monoprint

  • In Memory Of #8
    By Birgit Blyth
    Located in Hudson, NY
    Unique chromoskedasic monoprint on photographic paper 22 x 18 inches framed This contemporary, abstract style chromoskedasic monoprint was created by experimental photographer Birgi...
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Abstract Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Monoprint

  • Grid. No 6 (Contemporary Framed Gestural Lattice Motif Painting in Neutral tone)
    By Birgit Blyth
    Located in Hudson, NY
    Grid No.6, 2009 (Contemporary Framed Abstract Grid in Neutral Shades Black & Coffee) by Birgit Blyth 40" X 25" paper vertical chromoskedesic monoprint 44 x 29 inches framed, custom frame with black wood molding and anti-reflective glass This contemporary, abstract style chromoskedasic monoprint was created by experimental photographer, Birgit Blyth. Without the use of a camera, the artist produced this chromoskedasic image by applying the photographic chemicals to black and white photo pager and exposing it to light. The variety of caramel, toffee, brown and black tones is determined by the different chemicals used and the amount of time they are exposed to light. Here, the artist paints with the photographic materials in a gestural, linear motion. Beautiful hues of coffee, caramel, brown, grey, and black intersect to create unique abstract, intersecting grid patterns that resembles a basket weave motif. The photograph is complimented with a black metal frame with non-glare glass. It is equipped with sturdy wire on the back for instant and professional quality hanging. About the artist and work: Birgit Blyth is one of our most innovative and prolific photographers who works in a darkroom yet uses no camera! Blyth has been experimenting with a technique known as Chromoskedasic painting since the early ‘90s and variations on this concept have been shown at the gallery for the last 20 years. The unusual process involves the use of silver particles in black and white photographic paper to scatter light at different wavelengths when exposed. A chemist of sorts, Blyth demonstrates a thorough knowledge of how the various photographic chemicals will react when applied to paper and exposed. Each work is unique with palettes that resonate brilliant tonalities of brown, green, black, and purple. Using this technique, Blyth creates abstract crosshatching grids and most recently has developed a more gestural series of 20 x 16 inch chromoskedasic paintings that explores the ethereal qualities made possible by the unconventional material. Birgit Blyth succeeds at keeping her work fresh and cutting-edge using analog methods that are being quickly replaced elsewhere with digital technology. Though Birgit Blyth began her photographic career using conventional photographic methods, she quickly became more interested in alternative processes. In the mid 1990’s a colleague showed her an article in Scientific American and it was here that she first discovered the technique called “chromoskedasic” painting, which would eventually lead her to fully finding her voice as a photographer. Blyth had always aligned herself with and been moved by abstract expressionist painting. The series of veil paintings by post-abstract expressionist, Morris Louis, was especially inspiring to her and caused her to ask herself how she could do similar interpretations photographically. In “chromoskedasic” painting, she found the answers and would begin on a new path in her artwork. The term “chromoskedasic” is derived from Greek roots meaning color by light scattering. Developed by a photographer named Dr. Dominic Man-Kit Lam, this process exploits the capability of silver particles in black and white photographic paper to “scatter” light at different wavelengths when exposed to light and chemicals. In her mastery of this photochemical drawing process, Blyth has painted lush washes of color into her own “Veil Series;” she has envisioned landscapes, both rural and urban, with melting swirls and marbled colors into rich palettes of toffee and lead. She has used this essentially experimental process to help her “see” the world around her. Blyth says she continues to be fascinated by the process because it requires “a combination of discipline, experimentation, and imagination, making possible a wonderful balance between control and surprise.” Because the chromoskedasic work is all analog, Blyth spends much of her studio time in the darkroom, which has become a rarity in the current world of digital photography. She does however, continue her preference for experimentation in numerous directions, even employing aspects of the digital age – this exhibit will also feature a new series of pieces created with the now defunct but much loved SX-70 polaroid camera, scanned and archivally printed on 24” x 24” fine cotton rag paper. Whatever the process, Blyth’s work is, as the painter and poet, Peter Sacks noted, a blend of “precision and mystery, of articulation and atmosphere.” Her images leave us with the feeling of ongoing action despite the apparent stillness; of qualities both dreamy and stark as light hits a stand of birch trees in a valley or a group of buildings in New York City. As Morris Louis evolved a style of painting that produced a complete integration of paint and canvas, so too has Blyth, with photo paper and chemicals, created a perfect integration of method and content. Artist CV: Born: Kousted, Denmark Resident in U.S.A. since 1963 Education: Denmark and U.S.A. Project, Inc., Cambridge MA (Photography) DeCordova Museum School, Lincoln MA (Printmaking) Maine Photography...
    Category

    Early 2000s Abstract Abstract Photography

    Materials

    Photographic Paper, Monoprint

You May Also Like
  • Earth Remains #45
    Located in Sante Fe, NM
    This photograph is representative of two related series of mine that deal with humanity's impact on and relationship with the earth. This relationship is not sustainable. Lately, I have begun to dream of our tortured earth with the remains of our hubris drifting through space, mined to extinction. This work is an attempt to tear through the ugliness of the world we have made, through the blindness of our voracious appetite to the vastness beyond, where beauty cares not for our perception of it. As Robinson Jeffers wrote: “The beauty of things was born before eyes and sufficient to itself; the heartbreaking beauty/ Will remain when there is no heart to break for it.” -- William Lesch
    Category

    2010s Contemporary Color Photography

    Materials

    Copper

  • Signal #2
    By Kate Petley
    Located in Bloomington, IL
    Kate Petley's unique photogravure monoprints, made at Manneken Press in 2022, are a conversation between printmaking, sculpture and photography. Petley began by making a 3-D assembl...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Prints

    Materials

    Photogravure, Monoprint

  • Signal #4
    By Kate Petley
    Located in Bloomington, IL
    Kate Petley's unique photogravure monoprints, made at Manneken Press in 2022, are a conversation between printmaking, sculpture and photography. Petley began by making a 3-D assembl...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Prints

    Materials

    Photogravure, Monoprint

  • Signal #6
    By Kate Petley
    Located in Bloomington, IL
    Kate Petley's unique photogravure monoprints, made at Manneken Press in 2022, are a conversation between printmaking, sculpture and photography. Petley began by making a 3-D assembl...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Prints

    Materials

    Photogravure, Monoprint

  • Signal #3
    By Kate Petley
    Located in Bloomington, IL
    Kate Petley's unique photogravure monoprints, made at Manneken Press in 2022, are a conversation between printmaking, sculpture and photography. Petley began by making a 3-D assembl...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Prints

    Materials

    Monoprint, Photogravure

  • Signal #5
    By Kate Petley
    Located in Bloomington, IL
    Kate Petley's unique photogravure monoprints, made at Manneken Press in 2022, are a conversation between printmaking, sculpture and photography. Petley began by making a 3-D assembl...
    Category

    21st Century and Contemporary Contemporary Abstract Prints

    Materials

    Photogravure, Monoprint

Recently Viewed

View All