|
Charles Marvin Fairchild (SFS '48) Memorial
Gallery
December 3, 2007 · March 9, 2008
Introduction: American
Prints · What is
a Print?· Why Prints? · Printmaking
Techniques
Joseph Pennell · The
Modern City · World War I · WPA · Regionalism · Abstraction
Professor Elizabeth Prelinger
Exhibition Director
Keyser Family Professor of Art History
Dept. of Art, Music & Theater
Joseph A. Haller, S.J.
Curator Emeritus of Fine Prints
LuLen Walker
Exhibition Designer
Christen E. Runge
Production Specialist and Web Designer With special thanks to master printmaker Albert “Scip” Barnhart,
for printing the Tuthill lithograph and
loaning the stone and printmaking tools,
and artist William Tuthill for making
his work available for the exhibition.
Section I: Introduction/What is a Print/Printmaking
Techniques
Matthew Smith and Kathleen Sullivan
Section II: Joseph Pennell
Cara McMahon and Clare McKenzie
Section III: The Modern City
Kanani Hoopai and Kelly Young
Section IV: World War I
Julia Tarnell and Laura Nagy
Section V: WPA
Erika Nelsen and Alassandra DeSisto
Section VI: Regionalism
Van Bloys and Sarah Crocker
Section VII: Abstraction
Laura Blewett
and Janet Orrock
American printmaking began to flourish in the late nineteenth
century when American artists took an
interest in etching. Intrigued by the spontaneous handling
of line afforded
by the technique, they were part of a
wider Etching Revival that was taking place in England
and France. The spread
of the popularity of printmaking in America
was aided by the establishment of print clubs. After
a lull in
the popularity of printmaking around the
turn of the century, it reemerged in the early twentieth
century
with artists willing to experiment with
diverse forms and techniques. During the 1930s and 1940s,
printmaking
in America incorporated the growing influences
of contemporary European art. Beginning in the 1960s
American printmaking
was marked by the growth of workshops
that allowed contemporary artists to collaborate with
master printmakers on the
creation of prints, specifically lithographs
and silkscreens. The resulting prints appealed to audiences
already familiar
with the artists’ works in other media.
Drawn from the fine print holdings of Lauinger Library’s
Special Collections Research Center, this exhibition
represents the culmination of Professor Elizabeth Prelinger’s
Art History 457 seminar on Twentieth Century American
Prints in collaboration with Art Curator LuLen Walker
of Special Collections. Students from Prof. Prelinger’s
seminar selected representative examples of prints from
each of the 7 categories outlined in the exhibition,
and wrote all of the corresponding text labels. The Library’s
collection, which totals over 12,000 fine prints, was
formed by the tireless efforts and expert eye of Curator
Emeritus Joseph A. Haller, S.J., who began to establish
a teaching and research collection at Georgetown when
he retired from the post of University Treasurer in the
mid-1970s. It is to Father Haller that this exhibition
is respectfully dedicated.
The defining characteristic of a print
is that it is made by a process that allows the creation
of multiple copies of the same image. In order for
the image to be reproduced, the artist creates a
matrix—most often of stone, wood or metal—from
which the image can be printed. A printed image is
always a reversal, or mirror image, of the original
design. The pulling of printed impressions from a
matrix can be a highly technical process; therefore,
some artists rely on a master printer to complete
this part of the printmaking process.
Since the end of the nineteenth century, prints
have often been made in editions which comprise
a set number of impressions pulled from a matrix.
The concept of editions arose as a means of increasing
a print’s value by limiting the number created
and guaranteeing the quality. Once an edition has
been printed, plates or stones are often cancelled
in order to ensure that no more prints are made
from them. This can be done using such techniques
as scratching the image out, punching holes in the
plate, or grinding away the image from a lithographic
stone.
Prints have been used to bring low-cost imagery
to a wide audience and to promulgate ideas, propaganda
and advertising while offering an opportunity for
more intimate contact with a work on paper. Thus,
prints differ from paintings, which are unique objects,
which are usually more expensive and which do not
allow the same intimate relationship between the
viewer and the work. In addition, the multiplicity
of prints allows for a far wider range of uses including
such things as book illustrations, advertisements
and political posters.
Click the thumbnails to
see full-sized images, which will open
in new windows;
close each window to
return to This Print Is Your Print, This
Print Is My Print.
Planographic
Lithography is a technique based on the
fact that water and grease repel each other.
The artist starts with a smooth surface
of a stone,
generally limestone. The artist draws the
image directly onto the surface. There
are numerous materials that can be used
like litho
crayons and grease pencils. After the image
is complete, the artist or printer prepares
the stone. This involves a process of fixing
the image or “etching” it on the
stone. The printer does this with by treating
the surface with a combination of nitric
acid and gum arabic. Then the printer wets
the
stone with a sponge. The grease of the
image repels the water so only the blank
areas retain
water. When the printer rolls the ink onto
the image the ink adheres only to the grease
marks on the stone, that is, the drawn
image. The stone is then placed flat on
a scraper
press that runs horizontally along the
back of the paper. The pressure transfers
the ink
from the stone to the paper. The stone
must be rewet and inked before each print. A modern development of this process is offset
lithography. The image is prepared in the
same way but the printing method is different.
The image drawn on a plate is run under
a roller. The roller picks up the ink and
then rolls across the paper to transfer the
image.
This process is fast and efficient, and
is used in standard commercial runs of
lithographic
prints.
William
Tuthill (contemporary)
Faithful Friend
lithograph, 2007
165 x 245 mm
Relief Relief prints are prints in which the image
to be printed is raised above the rest
of the block,
which the artist has cut away. The
principal relief techniques are woodcut,
wood-engraving,
and linocut.
Various tools, including knives, chisels,
and gouges, can be used to carve away the
areas to create the
image. Once the artist creates the
raised lines, the ink is applied to the top
surface
only. All
the areas that have been carved away
do not receive ink and therefore do not
print in the resulting
image. Some artists use a negative
relief process, in which the lines are carved
away
and when printed,
do not register because they are below
the surface. Relief printing ink is very
thick so it will not
drip down into the carved areas. To
print a relief image, paper is laid across
the inked block and
a press applies vertical pressure.
Instead of using a press, one can also use
the block
as a stamp,
or rub the back of the paper to transfer the
image.
Woodcut starts with a wood block cut from
the side plank of a tree. The artist carves
along
the grain of the wood with a knife,
chisels and gouges. Close
parallel lines or cross-hatching creates
shading and tonal areas.
Instead of a
side plank of wood, wood-engravers
use the cross section, or end-grain,
of a piece of wood, which is much
finer and harder. The artist
cuts across the grain and not with
the grain. The stronger, harder section
allows the artist to make
more intricate and detailed lines
than are possible with a woodcut.
Because of the smaller, more detailed
lines, wood engravings can capture
tonal qualities more easily than woodblock
prints. Linocut is a newer type of relief print. The key
difference is that the artist cuts the
image into linoleum instead of wood.
Linoleum is much more
flexible and softer than wood, making
it very easy to cut. Because of the
lack of grain, it is easier
for artists to achieve smooth, solid
areas of color. This method is often
used in printing classes to
introduce students to relief printmaking.
Don
Rico (1912 – 1985)
Industrial Disease #1: Silicosis
wood engraving, 1933
201 x 152 mm
ed. 25
Don Rico began
his career in wood engraving during
the Great Depression, working
for the WPA Federal Arts Project.
Industrial Disease #1: Silicosis shows coal miners and tells of
the dangers they face while on
the job. Silicosis is a lung disease
developed from breathing in silica
dust found in coal and usually
is only considered a work related
disease. The bold lines underscore
the tragic fate of these miners,
who labor at low wages for decades
in the depths of the earth. Their
reward is an agonizing death.
Intaglio
Intaglio prints are created by incising lines into
a metal plate, historically copper, but more recently,
zinc. After creating the lines, the plate is inked
and then wiped clean to remove all excess ink from
the surface, leaving only the ink inside the grooves
of the lines. The printer lays a sheet of dampened
paper over the plate and runs both through the press.
The extreme pressure forces the paper into the lines
where it picks up the ink, thus creating the image.
Some different intaglio techniques include engraving,
etching, mezzotint, aquatint, and drypoint. Each
technique is printed the same but the way the lines
are created on the plate is different.
For engraving, the oldest of the intaglio methods,
the artist uses a tool called a burin,
or graver, and creates the lines by incising directly
into
the plate.
Etching begins with an etcher
covering the plate with an acid resistant
ground material. Using an
etching needle, the artist scratches
lines into the ground material to expose
the metal plate. When
placed into an acid bath, only the exposed
metal is “bitten” away. The longer the
bite, the deeper the line will become, the more
ink it
will hold, and the darker it will print.
The plate is then printed as described above.
To make a mezzotint, the artist works from dark
to light, creating a tonal image. The entire surface
of the plate is covered by densely overlapping indentations,
using a tool called a rocker. The more indentations
created on the plate, the more solidly black the
plate will print. From there the artist takes a
burnishing tool and smoothes away the sections of
the plate that are intended to be areas of light.
Mezzotints images are tonal rather than linear and
were traditionally used to reproduce paintings.
Aquatint is also a tonal process of intaglio printing.
Acid-resistant fine powder is dusted on areas of
the plate where the image requires tonal effects.
The acid then bites into the tiny intervals between
the aquatint particles. When inked, the aquatinted
areas create shaded passages. Artists often repeat
this technique several times to create layered tonal
effects. The artist may often combine aquatint with
another technique to make an image both with tonal
areas and with lines from another process.
Drypoint is similar to the engraving process in that lines are incised directly
into the plate. The artist uses a tool called a drypoint needle. When the needle
is pushed through the metal plate, it leaves raised metal edges called the “burr.” An
engraver sands away the burr for a clean line. But for a drypoint, the burr
is left on the plate. When the plate is inked and wiped, extra ink remains
in the burr, creating a dark, velvety texture. Many fewer impressions can be
pulled from a drypoint plate since the burr wears down more quickly than the
rest of the plate under the pressure of the printing press.
Louise
Miller Boyer (1890 – 1976)
The Converter at Night
drypoint, c. 1940
213 x 138 mm
gift of Helen Boyer
The Converter at Night shows a steel mill in Pittsburgh
in the early 1930s. Here, the monumental Bessemer
Converter turns iron into steel in a process made
even more dramatic in a night scene. Boyer created
this drypoint on a treated aluminum plate, instead
of the more common copper or zinc. She began experimenting
with aluminum plates after Alcoa opened a Pittsburgh
mill in 1931. Boyer was born and raised in Pittsburgh
along the Monongahela River. Many of her works depict
the laborers and mills along the riverside and explore
the social and environmental impact of industry.
The two diagonal lines seen on the top right and
bottom left of the plate are cancellation marks,
made by the artist or printer when the edition was
complete; these marks prevent additional, unauthorized
impressions from being pulled from the plate.
The “dean” of American printmaking,
Joseph Pennell became interested in the graphic
arts early in his lifetime; at the age of twenty,
he co-founded the Philadelphia Society of Etchers
and supported young printmakers long into the twentieth
century. Cosmopolitan and curious, Pennell documented
his many experiences in Europe and the Americas.
Having already ventured down to make etchings of
the construction of the Panama Canal, he served
on the print jury for the Panama-Pacific International
Exhibition in San Francisco in 1915. The artist,
along with his wife Elizabeth Robins Pennell, published
various books on the graphic arts, each advocating
a different printmaking medium, including Lithography
and Lithographers, 1898. In 1922, Pennell took charge
of the etching program at the Art Students League
in New York. His commitment to printmaking continues
through the Pennell Fund, which allows the Library
of Congress Division of Graphic Arts to purchase
original prints.
Joseph
Pennell (1857 – 1926)
Riverside Station, Pittsburgh
etching, 1919
300 x 252 mm
From atop the Duquesne Incline,
or funicular, the early morning
hustle and bustle of Pittsburgh unfolds
beneath the viewer. Pennell captured
the industrial nature of this city
with its smokestacks, railroads,
and the Ohio River. The artist compared
this modern technological scene
to the natural grandeur of the
Alps emerging from the mist at dawn,
commenting: “One
is as fine as the other.” Visible in this
image are the various tones Pennell created with
selective wiping of the plate, as in the upper right
corner, and his expressive use of line, as seen
in the silhouette of the skyline. A staunch advocate
of the intaglio media, Pennell believed that, “the
great etchers have suggested more colour, tone,
and values with a few lines,” than others
could with many more varied techniques.
Joseph
Pennell (1857 – 1926)
Union Square
lithograph, 1904
269 x 160 mm
ed. 100
Tenth in a set of images of twelve
New York landmarks making up the “Iconophiles” set, sponsored
by “The Society of Iconophiles,” this
transfer lithograph of Union Square joins Battery
Park, the Times Building, the Stock Exchange, Pine,
Williams and Nassau Streets, Broadway, Broadway
Towers, and the Flatiron Building. Pennell’s
elevated vantage point structures our gaze downwards
as if from a skyscraper. The technique of transfer
lithography involves first sketching the image on
special transfer paper directly in front of the
subject before handing the sheet to a master printer
for transferral to a lithographic stone and printing
up. Here, a pattern of dots, possibly reflecting
the texture of the paper, forms the trees, figures,
and buildings. Pennell’s earlier travels to
Venice taught him to draw the fine filigree that
marks the Square’s entrance as well as the
top of the former Decker Building, which anchors
the Square, and later in the century housed Andy
Warhol’s “Factory.”
Joseph
Pennell (1857 – 1926)
Bridge at Hell Gate
etching, 1915
213 x 276 mm
ed. 75
The two hulking towers of the Bridge at Hell Gate rise over the East River to
form the central compositional element of this etching. Construction was still
underway on this arch span when Pennell depicted it in 1915. The 3.2 mile- long
viaduct, completed the following year, was designed for a four-track railway
accommodating fast trains from Boston to New York. Pennell was inspired by monumental
technological projects; he made a special trip to observe the construction of
the Panama Canal. In this etching, he deliberately bit the lines very deeply
in order to convey a vivid impression of the engineering machinery used to construct
this bridge, the longest steel-arch span in the world.
At the turn of the century, American printmakers
began to look at their home cities with new interest.
Unencumbered by the historical legacy of their European
counterparts, American cities were free to experiment
with innovative architecture and planning. New York,
in particular, was a center of activity. Driven
by wealth and ambition, business enterprises scrambled
to establish themselves in Manhattan. Built in 1913,
the fifty-story Woolworth Building housed 400 different
companies, and the seventy-seven story Chrysler
building was out-built almost immediately by the
Empire State Building. The skyscraper, a marvel
of technological innovation, became the new icon
of modernity in America.
Leon
Dolice (1892 – 1960)
Radio City
color linocut, c. 1934
352 x 228 mm
Leon Dolice moved to New York City from Europe
in the 1920s. His new home became the subject of
most of his work. Radio City captures the grandeur
and energy of the rapidly evolving city. The heavy
black lines of the key, or drawing, block emphasize
the streamlined geometry of the building, as opposed
to the intricate decoration of the church and the
tangled branches of the foreground tree. The towering
Radio City Music Hall remains the largest indoor
theater in the world; when it opened in 1932 it
was considered the epitome of modernity with its
sleek lines and Art Deco interior designs.
Howard
Norton Cook (1901 – 1980)
Skyscraper #1
wood engraving, 1928
81 x 76 mm
Howard Cook watched as the
skyline of New York City grew. He
captured the immense forms
and
moody presence of these modern monuments
in such prints as Skyscraper #1. Beginning
his career as an illustrator for magazines
such as Forum and Harpers, Cook
eventually arrived in New York City.
Although this wood engraving is only
three inches square, it captures both
the grandeur and the slightly menacing
presence of this building.
Unlike many of the architectural
prints
of other American printmakers, Cook
presents a symbolic
and mysterious (as opposed to a
realistic) rendering of the metropolis.
With its oblique
angles and
velvety blacks, the skyscraper dwarfs
the surrounding buildings. The atmospheric
tones created with
the horizontal back-and-forth motion
of the wood-engraver’s
tool lend depth to the starkly contrasting
blacks and whites, creating an aura
of foreboding.
Charles
Wheeler Locke (1899 – 1983)
Brooklyn Heights, The Old Street
lithograph, c. 1930
291 x 205 mm
ed. 40
Charles Wheeler Locke is best
known for his lithographs of the docks,
wharves and streets of New York City.
In this image,
what seems
a nostalgic view of South Furman Street
in Brooklyn is actually a modern scene.
The darker
lithographic crayon lines in the foreground
lead the viewer from the figures on
the sidewalks back to the Brooklyn
Bridge in the distance.
Unlike the typically celebratory depictions
of this modern technological wonder,
completed in 1883, this image provides
only a tantalizing
glimpse of its delicate cables. Rather,
Locke realizes that life continues
as usual on this “old” street
despite the monumental changes that
are taking place nearby.
Gerald
K. Geerlings (1897 – 1998)
Santa Cinema
lithograph, 1927
290 x 225 mm
ed. 50
gift of David Allen
After serving in the First World War Geerlings
attended the School of Architecture at
the University of Pennsylvania and then
turned to printmaking.
In this 1927 lithograph entitled Santa
Cinema, Geerlings presents a documentary
image of the burgeoning growth
in New York City; here a towering New York
skyscraper soars upwards as city life continues
at street level.
Working with a lithographic crayon, Geerlings
contrasts the pristine white skyscraper,
with its geometric
shapes and planes, with the more organic
forms of people in the street. The intricacy
of the building
machinery reveals Geerlings’s professional
architectural training and a more positive
outlook on technology than we discern in
Cook’s
image.
The First World War (1914 – 1918)
broke out in Europe in August of 1914. Sparked
by the assassination of the Archduke of Austria-Hungary
and his wife in Sarajevo, the War derived from
untenable alliances among the European powers.
The United States maintained a neutral and pacifist
position until April of 1917, when President
Woodrow Wilson asked Congress to declare war
against Germany and Austria-Hungary. American
citizens rallied to serve their country in a
foreign war of unprecedented technical sophistication
and ferocity. Prints, as an art form, became
a crucial tool for propaganda and a method of
conveying the realities of war to the American
public. Both time and cost efficient, prints
were easy to manufacture in large quantities
and could be efficiently distributed throughout
the country. Large color posters, produced by
offset lithography and printed by the thousands,
exhorted Americans to enlist, buy Liberty Bonds
and conserve resources. War artists, either
commissioned by the United States government
or freelance, traveled to the trenches of Europe
and recorded actual events. The preliminary
drawings they produced were later recreated
as prints and appeared in popular American publications.
The works in this section are meant to display
a variety of sentiments towards the war, including
nationalism, patriotism, and disillusionment.
Lester
Hornby (1882 – 1956)
The Fighting Yank
etching, 1918
210 x 149 mm
ed. 40
Lester Hornby, schooled
in his home state of Massachusetts
and abroad in Paris, was a war artist
during World War I. Hornby
was granted permission by General
John Pershing in 1918 to spend six
months on the battlefront documenting
the American and French advances.
Hornby etched this image during his
time along the Marne and the
Meuse. Exemplifying masculinity,
an impossibly fit, sword-wielding
soldier, posed on barbed wire, directs
a cocky stare toward the viewer.
His muscled arm and chiseled facial
features epitomize the ideal
World War I solider. At first glance,
the image symbolizes the patriotic
strength of the American
military, though the figure stands
in stark contrast to the actual experience
of fatigued, starving soldiers.
Erotic symbols abound in this none-too-subtle
phallic representation, both in the
erect weapon and the
man’s arrogant stance. Hornby appears
to mock the war through his satirical
caricature.
James
Montgomery Flagg (1877 – 1960)
First Call
offset lithograph, c. 1918
243 x 496 mm
from the Roger N. Mohovich
Collection
James Montgomery Flagg’s poster, First
Call, motivated American men to join the
Navy in response to the United States’ declaration
of war against Germany and Austria-Hungary.
As an American illustrator
and official military artist for the
state of New York during World War
I, Flagg produced forty-six
different posters to promote enlistment.
Printed in red, white and blue, First
Call exemplifies patriotism
through the use of a popular national
symbol, the stern, white-maned Uncle
Sam—none
other than the artist’s self-portrait. The
copyright date reveals that this poster
was issued directly
after the United States declared war.
Recognizing the individual’s desires both
to serve his country and to be recognized
for his efforts, First
Call represents the multiple motivations
behind the decision to serve one’s country.
Lester
Hornby (1882 – 1956)
Wire Cutters
etching, 1918
148 x 197 mm
ed. 90
Aggressive etched lines capture
a tense moment in combat, as soldiers
lie prone before
a tangled barbed wire fence aiming
their weapons. The barbed
wire barrier, omnipresent in World
War I battlefield photographs, slashes
the composition in half, creating
zones of safety and danger. The
image stands in stark contrast to Hornby’s Fighting
Yank as
it rejects an idealized representation
of the American soldier. Loose strokes
of the etching needle outline
one soldier while thick cross-hatched
lines delineate the others more
fully. The sketchiness of the scene
vividly suggests the brutal terror of
war.
George
Taylor Plowman (1869 – 1932)
Ruins of Rheims
etching, c. 1918
148 x 101 mm
Minnesota-born George Plowman
worked primarily as an architect throughout
his career,
but also specialized in architectural
etching. During the
War, he journeyed to France, where
he etched this image. Remains of the
westwork and
spires of the
cathedral Notre-Dame de Rheims, shelled
by the Germans in 1914, tower above
the ruins and rubble
in the foreground. The destruction
of Rheims, coronation church of the
French kings
for centuries, symbolized
the utter senselessness and barbarity
of the War and the devastating effects
combat had on the cultural
patrimony of Europe. As British politician
Sir Edward Grey sadly noted at the
time, “The
lamps are going out all over Europe;
we shall not see them lit again in our
lifetime. ”
Charles
F. W. Mielatz (1864 – 1919)
Victory
etching, 1918
124 x 87 mm
Charles F. W. Mielatz’s etching, Victory, represents
American pride upon the return of American
battleships to New York Harbor at the
end of World War I. Born in Germany, Mielatz taught
etching at New York’s National Academy
of Design. For Victory, unlike his other
New York-themed images, the artist selected
specific heroic monuments such
as the Statue of Liberty as allegorical
backdrops for a show of power, symbolized
by the ships, airplane,
and the laurel wreath. Rendered with
intricate detail and exquisite control
of the etching
needle, this diminutive image expresses
an unambiguous celebration of the successful
conclusion of the
most destructive war in history.
The stock market crash of 1929 and the
ensuing Great Depression profoundly affected
American art and artists as the art market
all but vanished under
the failed economy. In 1932, newly elected president Franklin D. Roosevelt
instituted his “New Deal” reform measures, intended to provide
relief for the fourteen million unemployed Americans. The resulting Works Progress
Administration (WPA) was designed to preserve the dignity of the workers by
providing opportunities within their previous professions. For graphic artists,
this primarily took the form of the Federal Art Project (FAP), established
in 1935. The FAP artists depicted realistic murals of daily life on the numerous
public buildings they were assigned to paint. Thomas Hart Benton, Grant Wood
and other Regionalists influenced many FAP artists in their efforts to revive
an American style and focus on the hardships of the “man on the street.” Artists
emphasized social commentary in their art, a natural tendency since many artists
shared the economic plight of the ordinary people they portrayed. Easel painters
and print artists were given more freedom than mural painters with regard to
technique and subject matter, and were free to experiment with new European
styles and provocative themes.
Leonard
Pytlak (b. 1910)
Underpass
color lithograph, 1939
322 x 356 mm
In 1938 Leonard Pytlak was assigned
to the WPA/FAP seriography unit.
In this New
York City workshop Pytlak and many
other project artists began to experiment
with
color lithography, such as his 1939
print Underpass. This darkly lit
scene features
two men laboring under an empty and
desolate industrial roadway. Pytlak
focuses here
on an apparently ordinary Depression-era
scene: two men load a wheelbarrow while
a woman looks on indifferently from
her window. Yet a sense of hopelessness
pervades
the image. Bleak industrial forms overshadow
Pytlak’s figures, including the
two large telephone poles towering
precariously
above. A simple shack flanked by the
pointed branches of a barren and leafless
tree
completes this somber picture.
Lucienne
Bloch (1909 – 1999)
Land of Plenty
woodcut, c. 1935
270 x 222 mm
20/30
Swiss-born Lucienne Bloch joined the
WPA as a painter of murals, working extensively
with Mexican muralist Diego Rivera
throughout
the 1930s. The ironically titled
1935 woodblock print Land of Plenty reveals
the artist’s
preoccupation with the social and
economic injustices of her era. Here,
barbed wire
separates a poverty stricken family
from a field of towering stalks of
corn and
looming power lines. High tension
electrical wires were still rare at
the time; although
the New Deal attempted to provide
power to rural areas, many people were
still
too poor to afford electricity. The
stalks of corn most likely refer to
a program
organized by the Agricultural Adjustment
Administration, which paid farmers
to destroy crops in order to raise
prices.
The intense
contrasts between black and white
characteristic of the woodcut medium
comment on the
race of the family as well as the paradox
of
a situation where people starve in
the literal shadow of great abundance.
Harry
Sternberg (1904 – 2001)
Bethlehem Steel in Moonlight
etching/aquatint, 1937
202 x 223 mm
ed. 15
In Bethlehem Steel in Moonlight, Sternberg
records a dramatic moment when the smoke
stacks tower against the night sky. The
aquatint creates a murky film on the surface
of the print, which directly evokes the
grittiness of the location. Sternberg underlines
the sinister quality of the mills rather
than glorifying them as symbols of progress
and opportunity.
Harry
Sternberg (1904 – 2001)
Steel (aka Riveter)
serigraph, 1935
288 x 288 mm
ed. 30
Harry Sternberg began his WPA career in
1935 when he became a technical advisor
to the Graphic Arts division of the Federal
Arts Project (FAP). Sternberg specifically
chose to make prints because of their technical
versatility, and he left no print technique
untried. In 1936, a Guggenheim Fellowship
allowed him to study the conditions of
the workers in coal mines and steel mills.
In this aquatint, Sternberg encased a hulking
figure in a circular format from a perspective
that guides our gaze upwards in awe. The
sharp edged forms, typical of the stenciled
screen-printing technique, lend a sculpted
quality to the figure. Sternberg heroicizes
the worker, alone at the top of the world,
part of the city skyline.
Regionalism, a popular art movement of the 1930s,
repudiated America’s increasingly industrialized
society as well as the influences of modern European
art. Instead, Regionalist artists depicted Midwestern
rural life, with the intention of affirming traditional
American values. In addition to painting murals
in a figurative mode for the Works Progress Administration
(WPA), Regionalist artists also made black and
white lithographs, both because they were inexpensive
and able to be widely circulated, and because
of the straightforward draftsmanly character
of the lithographic medium.
Thomas
Hart Benton (1889 – 1975)
The Wreck of the Ol’ 97
lithograph, 1944
262 x 380 mm
ed. 250
from the Murphy Collection
Loosely based on an actual train
derailment in Virginia, The Wreck
of the Ol’ 97 depicts the
impending collision of man, animal,
and machine. A steam locomotive prominently
juxtaposed with a horse and cart crashes
old against new in a countryside setting.
Dark and demonic, the train challenges
the frightened white horse to a race
only one can win. Visually, strong
contrasts and undulating curves echo
the climactic nature of the coming
impact and the perilous uncertainty
of new technology.
Thomas
Hart Benton (1889 – 1975)
I Got a Gal On Sourwood Mountain
lithograph, 1938
317 x 234 mm
ed. 250
from the Murphy Collection
The son of a Missouri senator, Thomas
Hart Benton defied family tradition
by pursuing art. Though he studied
in Europe, it was upon his return
to his hometown of Neosho, Missouri,
that Benton developed his uniquely
American style. He often conveyed
the aural sensations of regional music
by contrasting black and white tones
in an abstract way.
In I Got a Gal On Sourwood Mountain, one
stumbles upon an impromptu dance hall
gathering in the back room of a saloon,
where sinuous dancers bend and curve
into exaggerated shapes. Tightly composed
and full of vibrant energy, one can
almost hear the refrain, “Hi-diddy-O-diddy-diddy-I
day,” ringing through the stylized
diagonals of the room and the tense,
yet harmonious arrangement of the
figures.
Grant
Wood (1891 – 1942)
Tree Planting Group
lithograph, 1937
214 x 276 mm
ed. 250
The regionalist artist Grant Wood
was born on a farm in Anamosa, Iowa,
a true Midwesterner. Although Wood
received art training in Europe during
the 1920s, he famously stated that “all
the really good ideas I’d ever
had had come to me while I was milking
a cow…so I went back to Iowa.” For
Wood, art was central to the promotion
of American culture. Perhaps best
known for his painting American
Gothic (1930), Wood began making
lithographs in 1937, when he and Thomas
Hart Benton were working for the Associated
American Artists (AAA). Wood’s
peaceful and fertile landscapes contrast
with the poverty and unemployment
of the Great Depression.
Tree Planting Group embodies
both the rural work ethic and its
promise of a peaceful life derived
from the abundant Midwestern soil.
Depicting the annual Arbor Day of
the Great Plains, this print depicts
an idyllic landscape and dedicated
laborers. Here there are no smokestacks,
no machinery, no signs of industrialization.
The finely hatched lines echo the
precision and stylized design; the
simple folk interact seamlessly with
the lush farmland.
Grant
Wood (1891 – 1942)
March
lithograph, 1939
226 x 301 mm
ed. 250
In March, one of a series
of prints representing the months,
Wood depicts the cold, barren winter.
A chill wind blows over the bleak
prairie field, stripped of trees and
blanketed in frost, blurring the detailing
of the crops. A dramatically curved
road leads the eye in an exaggerated
motion toward a horse drawn cart and
simple farmhouse. Wood maintains the
regionalist ideal of a reciprocal
relationship between man and the land;
the subtly drawn image comforts the
viewer with its familiar scene of
rolling hills and a quaint, country
farmhouse.
Abstraction deconstructs representation, rejecting
the imitation of reality in favor of an imaginative
expression of reality. Prior to World War I,
American art was traditionally representational,
lauded domestically for its so-called realism.
During the period between World War I and World
War II, many European artists immigrated to the
United States, bringing with them the philosophies
and techniques of avant-garde movements such
as Cubism and Surrealism. In printmaking as well
as painting and other media, American artists
explored the possibilities offered by abstraction,
creating non-narrative, non-representational
works that invoke visceral and spiritual realities.
Werner
Drewes (1899 – 1985)
Apparition
color woodcut, 1945
231 x 312 mm
gift of Charles Quest
Born in Germany, Werner Drewes studied at
the Bauhaus school of avant-garde art and
architecture during its tenure in Weimar,
the first of three cities it occupied during
its existence. In 1930 Drewes immigrated to
the United States and almost immediately helped
found the New York-based organization of American
Abstract Artists. Throughout his career, Drewes
worked predominantly with abstract color woodcuts.
The medium of the woodcut allowed him complete
involvement in the printing process; instead
of sending his creations to a master printer
or running them through a press, Drewes used
the back of a spoon to transfer the image
onto paper. Compositionally, Apparition conjures
a sense of dynamic tension by juxtaposing
hard and soft shapes in hues of black and
purple-brown. The artist created this impression
by printing the sheet of paper twice, with
two separate blocks inked with different colors.
Maybelle
Stamper (1907 – 1995)
June 10 Song
color lithograph, 1950
247 x 185 mm
In 1946 Maybelle Stamper moved to Captiva
Island off the coast of Florida, leaving
behind the New York art scene and her career
as a
professor at the Cincinnati Art Academy.
Until her death in 1995, she lived in isolation
and produced a rich body of works,
including
June 10 Song. In this color lithograph,
the artist juxtaposed lines and
geometric shapes
with curves and biomorphic forms,
employing the visual languages of
Cubism and Surrealism.
Her inclusion of the word “song” in
the title suggests synesthesia;
in the undulating forms and colors of
the print,
one senses
a melody. The result is a mystical
work of art, a record of introspection.
Josef
Albers (1888 – 1976)
Homage to the Square
color serigraph, 1959
280 x 280 mm
gift of Murray Lebwohl
German by birth, Josef Albers taught at
the Bauhaus, the progressive school for
architecture
and design in Dessau, until it was
closed by the Nazis in 1933, prompting Albers’s
immigration to the United States. Albers’s
graphic works especially exhibit the bold,
abstract forms typical of Bauhaus artists.
Homage to the Square is one of two prints
in the Georgetown Special Collections from
the portfolio Homage to the Square:
Ten Works by Josef Albers. The artist experimented with
the juxtaposition of greens and blues in his
standard composition of four nested squares.
As Albers observed, “With two separate
colors in no way overlapping, three
are produced through interaction. Each borrows
from and
gives to the other. Where they meet,
where they intersect, a new color results.
In science,
one plus one is two, but in art it
can be three. ”
J.
Jay McVicker (1911 – 2004)
Egyptian Series #10
aquatint, soft ground, collage, 1986
253 x 375 mm
Life-long Oklahoma resident J. Jay McVicker
experimented with styles associated with Romanticism
and Cubism before eventually embracing abstraction
as his mode of choice. He worked almost exclusively
with aquatint and often incorporated other
methods into his prints. For example, in Egyptian
Series #10 he included softground and collage
techniques along with color aquatint. The
use of softground in this work is distinctive
because the artist employed imprints of real
objects. By cutting shapes into the print
and attaching brightly colored paper behind
the holes, McVicker also created a three-dimensional
reality to contrast with the flatness and
textured illusionism of the softground objects.
The artist produced yet another layer of complexity
by using differently colored inks to create
shapes seemingly unrelated to his objects
and their placement within the print. Egyptian
Series #10 triumphs as both a technical tour
de force and an intellectual exercise in the
play of reality and illusion.
Return to top
|