Binnie

Paul Binnie

Scottish, b. 1967

Maple Leaves
(Momoji)

kappazuri (stencil print); titled, signed and numbered on the bottom margin, Momiji, Paul Binnie 19/50, with artist's oval seal bin-ni and square date seal Heisei roku-nen (Heisei 6 [1994]), ca. December 1993 - January 1994

dai oban tate-e 19 3/8 by 12 3/4 in., 49.3 by 32.4 cm

From 1993 to 1996 Binnie studied woodblock print carving and printing with the master Seki Kenji in Japan. Initially, Binnie worked as an assistant in Seki's studio in exchange for the opportunity to learn woodlock techniques. After 18 - 24 months, he became an independent artist-printmaker, and later on, Seki even did some editioning work for his former apprentice.

While he worked on his block carving skills, Binnie also began experimenting with kappazuri (stencil printing), which provided an accessible (albeit labor intensive) means to produce work during what was presumably a very stimulating period as an artist. Momoji ('Maple Leaves'), was only his third kappazuri print, and yet he deftly utilizes the technique to great effect in depicting the model's traditional Japanese tattoos- a subject he returns to ten years later in his 'A Hundred Shades of Ink of Edo' series in 2004.

References:
Paul Binnie: A Dialogue with the Past - The First 100 Japanese Prints, 2007, p. 47, no. 5

price: $650

kikumon

Scholten Japanese Art is open Monday - Friday, and some Saturdays by appointment only

Contact Katherine Martin at
(212) 585-0474 or email
kem@scholten-japanese-art.com
to schedule a visit between 11am and 4pm preferably for no more than two individuals at a time.
Visitors are asked to wear face masks and practice social distancing at their discretion.

site last updated
May 25, 2023

Scholten Japanese Art
145 West 58th Street, suite 6D
New York, New York 10019
ph: (212) 585-0474
fx: (212) 585-0475