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Pat Schaverien

Pat Schaverien

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Open a larger version of the following image in a popup: Pat Schaverien, The Swimming Pool, 1982

Pat Schaverien

The Swimming Pool, 1982
etching and aquatint on paper
32 x 40 cm
and dated (lower right): Pat Schaverien 1982
© Pat Schaverien
Photo: Ben Uri Gallery and Museum
Pat Schaverien describes her prints as a combination of etching and aquatint (drypoint and sugarlift); she also creates collographs, enjoying combining and layering different techniques. When etching she draws directly...
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Pat Schaverien describes her prints as a combination of etching and aquatint (drypoint and sugarlift); she also creates collographs, enjoying combining and layering different techniques. When etching she draws directly onto the plate using a drypoint needle to score into the metal or bites lines into the plate with acid, using aquatint to mimic the effect of a watercolour wash. Both techniques, as she notes, ‘vary in intensity’ and their effects, as in this work, can be ‘very subtle'. This composition of an empty swimming pool is eerily devoid of human presence, suggested only by the vacant swing hanging over the water at the far end, but the image also plays subtly with lines, grids and the multiplying reflections and shadows cast by the light of the window and the unpeopled urban scene beyond.
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Provenance

presented by Alexander Margulies 1981

Literature

Sarah MacDougall ed., 'Interstices - Discovering the Ben Uri Collection Guest curated by René Gimpel' (London: Ben Uri Gallery, 2020), pp. 66-67.; Walter Schwabe and Julia Weiner, eds., Jewish Artists: the Ben Uri Collection - Paintings, Drawings, Prints and Sculpture (London: Ben Uri Art Society in association with Lund Humphries Publishers Ltd, 1994), p. 93.
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