Homepage - artelino Art Auctions since 2001. Japanese prints, Chinese prints, Thangkas, traditional Tibetan rugs, statues from Nepal artelino Art Auctions since 2001. Japanese prints and Chinese prints. Japanese Prints Sign In  |  Register  |  Contact us  |  New User?

EDUTAINMENT

CATEGORIES

LINKS



36 Views of Green Island (26) - Footprint

Tom Kristensen, born 1962, is a young artist from Australia who works in the tradition of Japanese woodblock prints. On this page he describes his print work 'Footprint' from the series of '36 Views of Green Island'.

Green Island - Footprint - by Tom Kristensen
Prints by Tom Kristensen
Prints by Tom Kristensen
Green Island - Footprint
copyright Tom Kristensen

The images on this page are link-sensitive and take you to other articles or web sites in which you might be interested.

Footprint - No. 26

Human footprints are made and lost in countless numbers every day. In the sand by the water it only takes a few waves to entirely erase the signs of a person passing by. By rare chance a print is sometimes preserved and we are able to study the clues to understand something of the printmaker.

Ideal conditions are needed for a print to remain as a mark in time. Fresh prints need to be quickly covered over to avoid fading to nothing. In Italy fossilised footprints have been found dating back 350,000 years. Formed during a volcanic eruption these prints were made in the fresh pumice and then covered in the falling ash.

In Australia remarkable traces of human life have been uncovered from the inland sand dunes of Lake Mungo in New South Wales. Hundreds of footprints of men, women and children tell of life as it was 20,000 years ago. This is the largest collection of fossil human footprints found anywhere in the world.

Traces of Human Life

Video - Tom Kristensen
Video Tom Kristensen
Video Tom Kristensen
Click for Video
copyright protected

The prints were all formed in one episode by a tribe of people moving across a freshly wet clay pan. Reading the prints has combined the skills of anthropologists, archaeologists as well as the indigenous people descended from the printmakers. The native trackers who are able to read the slightest signs of life left on the landscape understand these prints as though they were made yesterday.

The prints fall into a series of tracks that show the sex and age as well as the speed, gait and weight carried by each person. Multiple tracks form into circling trackways left by people running with a shared purpose, perhaps hunting a kangaroo. A man with a group of children follows behind. A one-legged man made his track by running without trace of a crutch. This happy day, these people and their prints have now become part of the landscape.

Tom Kristensen, June 2008
(edited by Dieter Wanczura, updated October 2009

Video Presentation of Tom Kristensen

We produced a video with a short presentation of Tom Kristensen. Please click on the image or on the link to go to the video page.

Google
 
Web www.artelino.com

The images on this web site are the property of the artist(s) and or the artelino GmbH and/or a third company/institution.  Reproduction, public display and any commercial use of these images, in whole or in part, require the expressed written consent of the artist(s) and/or the artelino GmbH. . 

Saturday, November 21, 2009: Weekly auctions of Japanese prints from the 18th to 21st century and contemporary Chinese art prints. artelino art auctions since 2001.
Auctions of Japanese and Chinese prints.


Online Art Auctions

Tom Kristensen - Green Island

LINKS