NO HAND CAN BLOCK OUT THE SUN
-Chinese Proverb
Carolyn Shattuck who was born in Montreal, Canada, moved to the
United States in 1971. After a short stay , she and her husband
lived in Okinawa, Japan for three years where she became influenced
by the history and beauty of the Japanese prints . She returned
to the United States and studied painting at Bard College. After
graduating , she divided her time between her painting and developing
a unique printing method, using the monotype as a base. Her work
embraces the juxtaposition of many cross-cultural images. For the
past few years she has been studying the imagery of New England
tombstones. The folk art of urns, angels, death’s heads and
hourglasses are reinvented through narrative still lifes and landscapes.
More recently, she has been influenced by a trip to China where
she viewed the terracotta warriors which translated into several
bodies of work ,combining dry point technique and the monotype.
Shattuck believes her work is the freedom to extrapolate ideas and
motifs from many sources in order that they can cross-pollinate
and exist as a whole. She says “ I hope to celebrate life
in all its complexities while acknowledging the shadow on my left
shoulder”
Carolyn exhibits her work nationally in numerous juried exhibitions
including Delta National Small Prints, Parkside National Small Prints
and Printwork ‘98,2K at Barrett Art Gallery in Poughkeepsie.
She has received numerous awards including the University of Texas,purchase
award, National Works on Paper. She teaches workshops and is an
adjunct instructor at Castleton State College. Recently, Book Arts
has been the focus of a body of work combining drawing and print
assemblage techniques in three dimensional form.
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