The date noted is the year the plate was finished, but often he began work on a plate many years earlier. He explained his method of working: ‘I made a lot of sketches and took a lot of photos so I could remember details. I never draw or scratch after photos, the idea, the ‘feeling’, will die in a way then. For me, making art involves waiting, I look upon a proof or a drawing, thinking and waiting for the idea, the feeling, to ‘develop’. Taking time for an idea to mature. I always print my copperplates myself and I use a simple steel needle for the drypoint works.’ The story behind the print, in the artist’s own words, was written in February 2024.
Around Mountjoy Square and Gardiner Street Lower during the 1980s and 1990s, there were abandoned houses, ruins. Remains of upstairs rooms could be seen, a fireplace, marks of frames on the wall. Rooms where life had been lived.
Inscriptioncentre right: Lars Nyberg
lower right: Mountjoy Square
verso, upper left: Mountjoy Square
