Vicki MacLean is a well-established artist known for her large works in oil and watercolour. She evokes the subtle qualities of Nova Scotian rural life and landscape in those pieces.

A colorful etching by Vicki Maclean depicting a serene landscape with a flowing river, lush greenery, and a blue sky with clouds. A white bird is seen flying over the water.
Antigonish Harbour, 2 x 4 in.

With her more recent interest in intaglio, MacLean has translated her larger visions into rich, concise copper plate etchings.

An etching titled 'Morning Train,' depicting a scenic landscape with rolling hills, a river, and a train along a track, under a colorful sky with clouds.
Morning Train, 2 x 8.75 in.

These small etchings compress the energy and beauty of the natural world without losing any of its power to astonish.

MacLean graduated in art from the Connecticut College for Women in 1960 and went on to study figure drawing, lithography, and wood cut at the University of Wisconsin. MacLean then moved to Canada, living for several years in Cape Breton and then relocating to Antigonish, N.S. where sheย maintains her studio. She alsoย taught and directed the St. Francis Xavier University Art Gallery.

See all etchings on her artist page at Gallery 78 in Fredericton, N.B. here.

A detailed etching of a white boat resting on calm water, surrounded by lush green grass and a distant landscape.
Vicki Maclean, Waiting (boat), 7 x 24 in.

About Etching

Etching is an intaglio process. A metal plate is covered with a protective, acid-resistant wax ground. The artist then draws the image in the wax with a stylus, exposing the metal. The plate is then placed in an acid bath, which corrodes the exposed areas and creates furrows and troughs that will hold the ink. The depth of the etched lines is controlled by the strength of the acid and the amount of time the plate is exposed to it. After the ground is cleaned off, the etched plate is inked and printed.

Colours in an etching may be achieved by using a different etched plate for each colour or by using a method called โ€œร  la poupรฉeโ€.


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2 Comments

  • Your posts so often trigger me to go learn more about the subject! Thanks to you, I’ve just learned that the poupรฉe in question, the “doll,” refers to the wad of cloth used in the process, not to a child’s dolly. (I’m ready for a pub quiz…)

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