The Generations Series (3 of 5), 1983
Canadian, based in Yabu, Japan
serigraph on illustration board, edition 3/7, 17 × 24 ½ in. (43 × 62.2 cm)
Wayne Eastcott's Generation Series is a carefully constructed meditation on the interrelation and increasing “interpenetration” of technological and natural worlds in human life. This sequence of images generally moves from darkness to light, and the prints oscillate between horizontal and vertical orientations (traditionally associated with landscape and human figures, respectively) with strong repetition and dialogue between them. Generation 1 and 3 have the same visual structure and imagery—a circuitry diagram, escalators, a man walking among leafless trees—but they are produced with radically different colourations and layering strategies, thereby creating sharply different emphases and implications. Similarly, Generation 2 and 4 are composed of the same image set—an x-ray of a skull, a surgeon’s hand, leafy tress, a dense city street—but to exceedingly different ends. In Generation 5, the circuitry from 1 and 3 returns but is barely discernible, layered with new images of themes from 2 and 4, including a surgical theatre and dense urban housing. In a 1984 essay about this series, James Houston traced how the sequence pushes toward theological insight: “If sin lies at the heart of all human endeavour and all human creativity, so that all our expressions are ambiguous, for good and evil, then the presence of Christ must indeed be as the One in whom all things in all Creation coinhere. He is God as the Creator-Redeemer of humanity, the Technician who must enter into and encompass all that Eastcott’s art reveals, and much, much more.”
About the Artist
Eastcott is an experimental printmaker. Innovating techniques that incorporate drawing and photographic imagery, Eastcott’s prints often possess a strong technological skeleton and are then reworked with gestural effects. Within the conversation between drawing and photography---the eye and the lens---Eastcott considers the relationship between natural and manufactured worlds by exploring their governance by order, chance, structure, and randomness.
Eastcott graduated from the Vancouver School of Art (now Emily Carr University of Art + Design). He has since held various teaching positions, and he established the Dundarave Print Workshop and the printmaking department at Capilano College. He has exhibited nationally and internationally, including New York, Japan, Yugoslavia, Poland, Germany, Spain, India and Brazil, and his work is included in several notable collections, including the National Gallery of Canada.