Synopses & Reviews
A carefully squared block of highly polished endgrain boxwood or maple and a few sharpened gravers are insignificant in themselves. But in the hands of Hamilton artist Wesley Bates these seemingly inflexible demanding materials can create form, fluidity, mood, depth: an infinite world of light and shadow, monochrome and colour.
The English wood engraver Clare Leighton once wrote, Of all media, wood-engraving is the one in which there is the least to be taught and the most to be learnt.' The engraver's challenge to engrave light onto the block and to respect the mystery of solid blacks and whites is not easily met; but Wesley learned his craft carefully and methodically. He shows his admiration for English wood engraving in his skilful use of these simple gravers and his ability to suggest character and expression in his subjects.
Wesley's engravings maintain their moods and tell their tales with style, sensitivity, humour and skill. The subject matter in The Point of the Graver ranges from traditional folk ballads (The Brisk Young Butcher) to modern allegories (A Contemporary Fable), from simple commissions (Ex Libris) to elaborate three-panel illustrations (To the Avon River above Stratford, Canada). In all of these Bates display a technical virtuosity that allows him to live on the point of the graver' where there is the constant danger of passing the point of no return.
Synopsis
A carefully squared block of highly polished endgrain boxwood or maple and a few sharpened gravers are insignificant in themselves. But in the hands of an artist like Wesley Bates these seemingly inflexible, demanding materials can create form, fluidity, mood, depth: an infinite world of light and shadow, monochrome and colour.' - William Rueter
Wesley Bates' sensitivity to the human figure and face, his love of music, his fascination with books and printing - all are portrayed in the sequence of eighty-two engravings and their commentary. In addition, his skill as a book illustrator is apparent in the selection of engravings which he has chosen from his publications and which illustrates, as Will Rueter points out, that the medium of the traditional wood engraving - even through offset reproduction - still has an important function in contemporary books.'' ... Bates captures the beauty and character of a landscape that is as unforgettable as it is unmistakably Canadian.' - Canadian Notes & Queries
The Point of the Graver, the first book-bound collection of Hamilton-based Wesley Bates' wood engravings, confirms the prosperity of his imagination and the exactitude of his workmanship.' - Quill & Quire