New Ink on the Block Makes an Imprint

Artist Jeff Palmer creates block prints that capture the essence of his subjects

Share
New Ink on the Block Makes an Imprint
Copy

Jeff Palmer is a self-taught artist who works with block printing. Based in Rhode Island, Palmer had to adapt when COVID-19 began sweeping the country, calling it the “pandemic pivot” because “our lives were put on hold.”

But relying on pop culture and throwing in a dose of chaos, Palmer continued to create artwork and discovered block printing on Instagram.

Here is a conversation. The full interview can be found here.

“I started to see some things on Instagram about printmaking, and I started to get curious about it because when you make an original piece of artwork and sell that, it’s gone and that’s a good thing,” Jeff Palmer says. “But I got curious about printmaking because you can create a negative image, a plate that you can ink and make copies of, and you can not just sell one or 10, but as many as people want to buy.”

Block printing is something ingrained in everyone, Palmer says. Call it a natural fingerprint.

Creativity spills all over the place

“I always tell people we’re born with our own block print and it’s our fingerprint,” he says. “So basically that’s what it is. And there’s ink that lands on a surface and you press it. That’s what makes those lines. If we didn’t have a fingerprint, it would just be all black, right?

“I’ve always been kind of into chaos, which kind of spirals into taking things apart, putting them back together again. And I think maybe in my head, there’s a lot of ideas that need to get out. It’s messy. I guess maybe that’s more of it. It’s like creativity to me, spills all over the place.”

Palmer says he has been influenced by singers, actors and artists. He also enjoys creating portraits, “capturing sort of the essence of a face.”

“Sometimes I’ll incorporate little snippets of lyrics, their songs, or just something like Prince, ‘Let’s go Crazy,’” he says.

Bringing artwork to the people

Palmer said his experience as a graphic designer impacted his view of Rhode Island, and he just started “to think of it in terms of catchy phrases.”

“What I do is I try to find those folks that have really touched me and influenced me, the people, the musicians, the politicians, the big thinkers of a moment in time, a point in history that are influencing us, that are affecting us,” he says. “But what I love most, I think, is really bringing the artwork to the people, to the folk.

“Folk art. It’s always a trip. You never know who you’re going to connect with. You never know who you’re going to meet.”

A few weeks ago, Rhode Island lost beloved musician and teacher Rory MacLeod. As we close out 2025, we’re sharing some excerpts from a studio session earlier this year with Rory and his wife, fiddle player Sandol Astrausky
Rhode Island’s senators say the Trump Justice Department bypassed a bipartisan process in appointing Charles ‘Chas’ Calenda, calling him unqualified for the top federal prosecutor role
‘I don’t have an additional $900 lying around in my family budget to pay for this’
Research from Salve Regina University shows many libraries across southern New England are dealing with employee burnout and high rates of turnover as they try to adapt to modern-day patron needs
For this year’s final episode of the Weekend 401, we have some New Year’s tips — from Deer Tick at the Uptown Theater, to the last Waterfire of the year, to the 30th annual ‘Moby-Dick’ marathon at the Whaling Museum. Plus: kick off the new year with an ice-cold splash at First Beach
The downtown landmark lit up again this holiday season, as its new owner hopes to reopen the building as art studios in early 2027