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About Corona / crimson dawn / EPC

Corona / crimson dawn / EPC is the 33rd work for my Experimental Print Club.

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Corona / crimson dawn / EPC #33
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10 colour pigment print on Hahnemühle 305gsm ultra smooth photo rag
Edition of 12, plus 2 APs
Printed in December 2025
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Sheet size Xcm H x Xcm W

Image size Xcm H x Xcm W

 

In situ and in the studio

 

About the Print Club

If you’d like to receive three or four exclusive new editions in the post each year, alongside personal news and views from the studio, and invitations to shows and fairs, please do consider becoming a member of my Experimental Print Club. You can join or leave the club at any time, with absolutely no obligation to stay any longer than you want to.

New works are sent out somewhat sporadically throughout the year, often in line with the changing seasons. Each piece is unique, exclusive, and only available on the day it’s editioned, the size of the edition being determined by the number of members on the day.

I hope the club presents a more personal and intriguing way to connect with the studio, by creating a platform for collecting engaging new works for your home. The club is hosted online here, and I send out fairly regular blog posts and emails about the work too. I’d like to think that it’s an interesting proposition!

Membership is currently priced at £36 per month inc. UK delivery, or £42 for an international address.

 
 

News /

From my blog / 30th November 2025

I’ve been working on this piece on and off since about June I think, in large part before starting work on my more recent Helios piece. I wanted to see if I could make an asymmetrical piece that has a really vigorous movement of line and ink coming from multiple centres of energy. As ever I like the idea of using the digital toolset to make work that couldn’t have been made in the pre-digital era; a spin painting more usually has only one centre of rotation, although as I write this now, I can appreciate that you could move and spin a canvas multiple times, so maybe that is more an aesthetic decision than a physical limitation.

Any student of art history will immediately notice that the work takes significant inspiration from the work of Sonia Delaunay and her husband and creative partner Robert Delaunay; along with some of the style and energy of the legendary British artist and printmaker Cyril Power whose best work was made between the wars.

I was lucky enough to have just enough time to visit the Musée d'Art Moderne de Paris this summer, in between changing trains on the way back from Southern Spain in early June. The galleries there display several of Delaunay’s huge canvases, each maybe 10ft high, the size alone is breathtaking and having only seen the works in reproduction previously, I was really taken by the ambition of the work and the energy it embodies.

Looking at both these new Print Club editions side by side on the bench here, it’s interesting to see the difference in the colouration and tonality between them. Corona seems far more punchy than the Helios piece, and I suspect that has something to do with the nature of the way they are drawn, the Corona study is purely digital and utilises pretty much everything I’ve learnt about working on system to capture energy in digital mark making, and spin it back out in a fairly gestural way, albeit a machine generated one.

For me, it’s been an interesting correlation between two very different ways of working, one far more haptic then the other. I’m hoping to push further into this territory in 2026, and allow myself to loosen up considerably more if I can.

I use the word ‘allow’ advisedly, as I think that idea of allowing yourself the time and permission to speak with your own voice, rather than hold back and edit it, lies at the heart of what I’ve been doing and not doing over recent years. Can it be possible to reach a place where the work is as loose and abstracted as, for instance, Sandra Blow’s extraordinary paint splattered canvases of the 1980’s. I’m not sure. Certainly the digital simultaneously puts a brake on that kind of kinetic action through it’s lack of immediacy of input, you can’t throw paint inside the system, but simultaneously allows you to edit actions in previously unimaginable ways. I wonder if I can in fact combine more kinetic real world mark making in the studio with digital techniques to create something more fluid and more dynamic than we’re seeing here. It’s something I’ll be thinking about more over the coming months.

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Read the original blog post here >
https://chuckelliott.com/news/print-club-news-30th-november-corona-crimson-dawn

 
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Associated works

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Previous

Helios delineated / night and day / EPC Print Club Edition #34

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Next

Phase TWO / hi chroma / EPC Print Club Edition #32