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Mar 17
, 
10:00 am
 – 
4:00 pm

Cyanotypes: Alternative Photographic Process

Sally Ayre

Learn to create beautiful cyanotype prints with deeper blues and a longer tonal range using the modern cyanotype printing process in this hands-on workshop.

This workshop offers the experience of combining contemporary image-making with one of the earliest photographic printing processes. Cyanotype is a non-silver process that can be combined or used independently to create distinctive Blue toned imagery on natural materials such as silk or art papers. This hands-on workshop with artist Sally Ayre covers proper coating, exposing, and developing techniques for Cyanotype.

For this workshop, you must bring your own Black and White negatives (maximum size 8x10").  If you need to print digital negatives, Gallery 44 can provide this service only for the purposes of this workshop.  You can print digital negatives maximum 16" wide for $8/square foot. Please inquire about this service upon registration.  You must submit your files at least 2 weeks prior to the workshop in order to have them for the session.

Sally Ayre is a photo-based artist born in Newfoundland, now living in Toronto. A graduate of OCAD (1990), she has exhibited her work nationally and internationally. Sally has an upcoming solo exhibition Shift at Open Studio in the Print Sales Gallery in May 2018 and her most recent solo exhibition was Laughter in the Breeze in Gallery 44’s Member’s Gallery 2015. She was the 2012/13 recipient of Open Studio’s Nick Novak Fellowship culminating with her solo exhibition Traces, at Open Studio in October 2013. Sally is also an educator specializing in Historical Photo Processes and has received several grants and awards.

$

 Non-Members

$

 Members

$

 

Register
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401 Richmond St. W, Suite 120, Toronto, ON, M5V3A8
info@gallery44.org
416.979.3941
Closed during lockdown. Online office hours Tue – Fri, 11:00 – 5:00 PM.
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Gallery 44 acknowledges that it is situated on stolen land. On the ancestral and traditional territories of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation, the Haudenosaunee, the Anishinaabe and the Huron-Wendat, who are the original owners and custodians of this land that they continue to inhabit today.

Acknowledging the land on which we work and create is an important first step towards truth and reconciliation, however, much more needs to be done by settlers, by our government, and by us as arts practitioners to educate ourselves and others, and to endeavor to end ongoing colonial violence.

During this global pandemic, it is important to acknowledge that Indigenous communities in Canada continue to live under increasingly inequitable conditions.

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