I got an A in Web Programming. This is significant and has a very significant impact on my self-worth and faith in my future.
BFA Printmaking
University of Louisville
2012
All work is © Clinton McKay unless otherwise indicated
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I got an A in Web Programming. This is significant and has a very significant impact on my self-worth and faith in my future.
Silkscreen processed with my duplicator web app and photoshop
My buddy and all around super cool dude Clinton McKay (artist and programmer and librarian extraordinaire) made this really fun javascript program thing for images. You too can play with it here! I had a lot of fun running my prints through it.
My program is making art, people. That makes my program an artist. Which is more than I can say for most of you.
Unwitting collaboration with Chris Russo
Eclectica Magazine v17n2, Apr/May 2013
By the way, my paintings were featured in the April/May issue of Eclectica Magazine, go read some stuff and look at things.
le new website, in case any of you were wondering how all of my banging my head against the wall over the past few days turned out.
here I made it do more stuff:
http://www.clintonmckayart.com/duplicator2.html
Big news update: I’ve been trying to put together a simple dynamic webpage for a whole day and it’s been going really… not well.
In other big news, I created my first web app for making art. You can use it with transparent gifs to make cool stuff, just paste the url of the image and choose a spacing (1 or 2 will blur the gif, more will spread it out) then randomize as much as you want!
Try it out: http://www.clintonmckayart.com/duplicator.html
Even though this is a totally horrifically bad paper lithograph, it still has a little place in my heart. The texture that resulted from my “I’m really bad at printing this” status as a new lithographer actually made the design a lot more interesting than it would have been if it had been perfect.
Collaboration with Analise Brown (stone lithograph)
This was Analise’s first lithograph, she drew and etched the lines and we printed a few over some gradients I had drawn in rubbing crayon.
This is from June of 2012.
This isn’t actually a print, per se, but it is a record of my first attempt at silkscreening gum arabic onto a stone as a resist for etching.
I think it’s pretty cool.