Nancy McIntyre

Over the years, most of Nancy’s silkscreens have depicted man-made places, especially well-worn storefronts, and porches. She tries to persuade viewers to find beauty in the ordinary, even in the shabby, especially when the light is right. Nancy states, “I want to celebrate the human, the marks people make on the world. I want to say, treasure the local, the small-scale, the eccentric, the ordinary: whatever is made out of caring. A place that has known a lot of use begins to suggest stories of the people who’ve had their hand in making it. One can find an interplay between the original design of a place and how it’s been lived in and changed over time. If you happen to be looking through a window, there is another layering, as the scene behind you is superimposed upon what is inside. Reflections on old storefront windows make downtown walks fascinating. This super-imposed layering is well suited to the silkscreen printing process, using transparent layers of color to allow what’s underneath to show through, which is exactly how I like to print.”
Nancy takes photographs for reference, then once in her studio, recreates the way the light hit, the air felt, in that moment. An edition begins with a full-sized master drawing, which is set under each screen as a guide for the hand-painted and hand-drawn stencils. She prints through the stencils, layer upon layer, sometimes 100 layers or more. A typical layer is made up of different transparent colors fading into each other. She prints all her own editions. During the printing, images evolve as the process itself gives Nancy ideas beyond her initial vision.