Fairchild left school at sixteen to train
as a technical illustrator. Graphic design was his main
degree qualification. He found technical drawing interesting
because it is so exact-you can't argue with it. In this
way, his first exposure was to an art that was highly disciplined,
and this has proved invaluable throughout his career. His
first employment was in advertising, producing photo realistic
airbrush illustrations. He then went on to work for the
Sackville Press, publishers and producers of educational
books and diagrams. Fairchild was involved in producing
technical illustrations, again highly disciplined and working
to deadlines.
In 1980, he made the break from graphics and became a freelance painter. Fairchild
was in a sense released and could paint in the way he wanted. His prints too,
reveal this same sense of freedom and optimism. There is a sensuousness about
them that evokes a feeling of timelessness and tranquility. Every available surface
is filled with color and pattern-they are as colorful as Persian Illuminations,
always brilliant, never harsh. Fairchild's aim is to draw with Japanese freedom,
to produce images that are shrouded in duplicity and mystery. He loves to break
the color up, reveling in the secrecy of it..
In recent years, Fairchild has devoted more of his time to printmaking. The process
of printmaking is complicated and protracted. Fairchild starts by making working
drawings and then produces a highly finished color study on unsized Spanish cotton
rag papers. Washes are first applied, which are absorbed deeply within the fabric
of the paper. The image is then progressively built up using stronger and stronger
colors until finally the sumptuous reds and glistening golds are applied to the
surface. By now, most of the compositional problems will have been resolved and
it is time to make the print..
The same process is repeated, but this time individual silk-screens are made
for each of the washes and each of the colors that go to make up the image. These
screens are handmade and the image they bear, and the colors they take, can all
be modified throughout the proofing process until perfect compositional and color
balances are achieved. Photographic processes are not involved. The aim is not
to reproduce the study exactly, but to establish a print, which has a life and
integrity of its own..
During printing, which may involve the application of 40 or 50 screens, the image
begins to emerge, color by color, first the background base colors and washes,
and finally the stronger decorative surface details. At all stages, the artist
is free to rework the screens, change each color, until he has a single perfect
print. The process is then reproduced up to 350 times until the limited edition
is complete. The screens are then destroyed.