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Zuoz

Alex Booker

£95

Zuoz, limited edition woodcut print hand printed on Japanese Hosho paper by contemporary artist Alex Booker

 

Murus Curator, Erica says “Alex captures this beautiful vista at a point where it feels the season is changing as the light emerges. The snow appears to be melting away and the lake coming to life as the scene draws you into its centre. I love how you can tell your own story with Alex’s work, he captures feelings and atmosphere which taps into our own memories and experiences. The rich blue lifts the monochrome palette creating a positive uplifting piece. Alex intricately carves out his woodcuts, finely cutting out every mark to create each block to hand print every layer of colour – an awe-inspiring process.”

 

Edition of 30

 

Size: 46cm (h) x 67cm (w)

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Shipping

UK unframed orders delivered within 7-10 days and framed within 21 days. International orders are despatched within 7-10 days. Please note, we only ship framed art within the UK.

Returns

If you’re not happy with your artwork, you can return it to us in original condition and packaging within 14 days for a refund. Please note, framed orders are custom-made and cannot be returned. Read our returns policy here.

Framing

Try ‘Our Pick’ for our curator’s framing recommendation. Our framing is handmade in London – learn more about framing here.

Interest Free Finance

Buy with Own Art and spread the cost over 10 months interest-free. To borrow from £100 to £2500 opt for PaybyFinance at checkout. Learn more here.

Zuoz, limited edition woodcut print hand printed on Japanese Hosho paper by contemporary artist Alex Booker

 

Murus Curator, Erica says “Alex captures this beautiful vista at a point where it feels the season is changing as the light emerges. The snow appears to be melting away and the lake coming to life as the scene draws you into its centre. I love how you can tell your own story with Alex’s work, he captures feelings and atmosphere which taps into our own memories and experiences. The rich blue lifts the monochrome palette creating a positive uplifting piece. Alex intricately carves out his woodcuts, finely cutting out every mark to create each block to hand print every layer of colour – an awe-inspiring process.”

 

Edition of 30

 

Size: 46cm (h) x 67cm (w)

Shipping

UK unframed orders delivered within 7-10 days and framed within 21 days. International orders are despatched within 7-10 days. Please note, we only ship framed art within the UK.

Returns

If you’re not happy with your artwork, you can return it to us in original condition and packaging within 14 days for a refund. Please note, framed orders are custom-made and cannot be returned. Read our returns policy here.

Framing

Try ‘Our Pick’ for our curator’s framing recommendation. Our framing is handmade in London – learn more about framing here.

Interest Free Finance

Buy with Own Art and spread the cost over 10 months interest-free. To borrow from £100 to £2500 opt for PaybyFinance at checkout. Learn more here.

Alex Booker

Alex Booker lives and works in London. He studied fine art printmaking and has a Masters in Fine Art Printmaking from University of The Arts London. What inspires your work as an artist? That’s a huge question. I hate to sound like a cliché, but I’d be hard pressed to find something that doesn’t inspire me. Ideas emerge in the quiet mundanities of life alongside the moments that blow my mind. Being an artist gives me space to work with the vast themes of history, philosophy, freedom, romance, the sea and the beauty of nature… and focus in on the slightest detail of a specific block I’m making. Who are your biggest influences? Over the past few years, I’ve read everything by the writer and philosopher Albert Camus, which has had a huge influence on my work and me as a person. His writings on justice, freedom and the absurd have inspired new meanings and obsessions in my work. Also, after a recent trip to Mexico, the tradition of political and social print activism was amazing to see, and to meet the people doing it every day. I wasn’t aware of its cultural and social importance, especially the prominence of woodcut and lino printing that we found everywhere in Oaxaca. What does your work mean to you? It means freedom, which means everything. My time in the studio is where I’m most thoughtful and where I can live my hopes and dreams, deal with the anxieties and fears in life, and ponder the absurdity of it all. Plenty of existential questions - thanks Camus! What techniques do you use? My central process is woodcut printmaking, cutting plywood with hand tools such as knives and gauges and printing with inks on various types of handmade paper, my favourite being Japanese Hosho paper (which might sound a bit specialist, but you can buy a 10 metre roll for £12, and it’s well worth it). Drawing and mono printing is another part of my studio practice, which has become more important over the past few years. The looseness and lack of repetition in those is exciting for me. You get one shot.