Portland artist Liv Rainey-Smith brings her creepy wood block print to a sheet of maple veneer. This laser print on natural maple wood veneer, sustainably harvested and processed in the USA. Creating wood veneer actually uses less wood and energy than paper-making!
Like the Black Goat of the Woods With a Thousand Young? Like eerie anthropomorphic rabbits cavorting in a ghastly forest? This is the print for you.
Woodland Rites Print by Liv Rainey
Liv Rainey-Smith is an artist specializing in hand-pulled xylographic prints. Her imagery draws primarily upon historic styles, folklore, dreams, and esoteric traditions. Rainey-Smith’s woodcut process incorporates a mixture of traditional and modern tools as well as a blend of European and Japanese printmaking techniques. She pulls her own fine art prints in small editions on both paper and animal parchment.
Rainey-Smith completed her BFA at the Oregon College of Art of Craft in 2008. Two woodcut prints from her thesis, The Four Portlanders of the Apocalypse, may be glimpsed in Season 2, Episode 7 of Portlandia. Since graduation, she has worked full time as a woodcut printmaker in Portland, Oregon. In 2013 she took the business name Xylographilia (“Love of Woodcut”) to reflect her love of the art form. She was accepted as a professional member of Print Arts Northwest in 2010.
In addition to her self-directed work, she has also collaborated with Three Hands Press on a number of titles including Michael Howard’s Children of Cain, and most notably Robert Fitzgerald’s Arcanum Bestiarum for which she created over fifty original woodcuts.
In addition to being an affiliate of Three Hands Press, Rainey-Smith has contributed art to titles from Rubedo Press, PS Publishing, Chaosium, and Mercuria Press. She has served as the artist liaison of the annual Esoteric Book Conference in Seattle, Washington. She is also a regular guest and contributor to the annual H.P. Lovecraft Film Festival & CthulhuCon, where she has competed in the Pickman’s Apprentice Live Art Competition. In lieu of drawing, she races to complete an original woodcut print based on an audience prompt within a ninety-minute deadline.
Size: 8.5 x 11 inches.