Scott Avett returned to campus in 2008 to create this print commemorating the band’s year-end concerts.
In a recent post to the Ramseur Records blog (ramseurrecords.blogspot.com), Scott Avett talks about his passion for printmaking: My introduction to printmaking was by professor of printmaking at East Carolina University, Michael Ehlbeck. While focusing on painting as a concentration at the School of Art, I also found time and the good fortune to learn multiple printmaking processes under Ehlbeck’s instruction. Among these processes was relief block printing, which I initially learned on wood and then later on linoleum. The process has proven very useful in the moving world that I live in, where mobility is a must due to the changing workspace. Over the past five years I have used The Avett Brothers’ annual New Year’s shows as a commercial outlet to produce prints using this process. In between show posters I have also completed prints using other subject matter as well. The process of relief block printing starts with a drawing, usually in one of my many sketch books and then it is transferred, in parts, to a large piece of tracing paper to make up a unified composition. The image is then traced again on the opposite side of the tracing paper and then burnished onto a piece of linoleum. I then redraw the image over the lines I have transferred
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and add touches and possibly more elements to the image on the linoleum, sometimes changing it completely. Some images are drawn straight to linoleum when traveling with scrap pieces. After the image is completely drawn in black ink on the linoleum, I began carving the unmarked areas away. This creates the “negative” space that ink will not touch, and will leave the paper exposed creating the lighter value of the image. The black areas that make up the drawing become the surface in which the ink is carried and make up the dark value of the image. Once the linoleum block is entirely carved I began the printing process. Printing has been done in the printmaking department at East Carolina University with the help and support of Michael Ehlbeck and others. Without the faculty within the printmaking department at the School of Art at ECU, printmaking, for me, would not be possible. The prints are made in limited runs and are signed and numbered accordingly. Some will not be reproduced. Some of Avett’s artwork can be viewed and purchased at Envoy Gallery located in New York City’s Lower East Side or at www.envoygallery.com. Prints are also available through Applewood Gallery of Charlotte, N.C.