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Exhibition Information Posted: 05/13/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Christiane Baumgartner: White Noise

Musée d'Art et d'Histoire, Genève, Geneva, Switzerland. 03/20/2015 - 06/28/2015.
Exhibiting artist(s): Christiane Baumgartner.
Née en 1967 à Leipzig, Christiane Baumgartner compte parmi les personnalités majeures de la gravure contemporaine. Après s’être consacrée exclusivement à la xylographie, elle renoue désormais avec des pratiques telles que le dessin et l’eau-forte. Cette nouvelle orientation met notamment en question son goût pour les formats monumentaux, caractéristiques de sa production de ces dix dernières années. La majorité de ses œuvres ont pour base une image vidéo ou photographique qu’elle retravaille sur ordinateur pour la transférer ensuite en xylographie ou, comme récemment, en photogravure. La tension née de la rencontre d’une vision contemporaine et d’une technique traditionnelle radicalise la position de l’artiste vis-à-vis des attentes du spectateur. L’exposition est organisée en collaboration avec l’artiste, le Centre de la gravure et de l’image imprimée à La Louvière et le Museum Kunstpalast à Düsseldorf.
Relevant research areas: Western Europe, Contemporary, Etching
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 05/13/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Hokusai

Museum of Fine Arts, Boston, Boston, MA, United States. 04/05/2015 - 08/09/2015.
Katsushika Hokusai (1760–1849) was the first Japanese artist to be internationally recognized, and he continues to inspire artists around the world. As the home of the largest and finest collection of Japanese art outside Japan—including the greatest variety of Hokusai works in any museum—the MFA is uniquely positioned to offer a comprehensive exhibition of this remarkable artist. Drawing from extensive holdings of paintings, woodblock prints, and illustrated printed books, the Museum will showcase an array of works from Hokusai’s seven-decade career, including lesser-known pieces depicting whimsical instructions on how to draw, dynamic paintings on paper lanterns, and elaborate cut-out dioramas. Also displayed are some of the most famous images in Japanese art, including Under the Wave Off Kanagawa (Great Wave) (about 1830–31)—from the legendary series Thirty-six Views of Mount Fuji—and the brilliantly colored multi-panel screen painting Phoenix (1835). Spanning Hokusai’s work from his 20s through his 80s, the exhibition will explore common themes through sections dedicated to topics such as landscapes, nature, fantasy, and the “Floating World” of urban culture (including depictions of the Kabuki theater and the Yoshiwara pleasure district). Works that depict Japanese historical and literary motifs will be featured along with “perspective prints” with exaggerated vanishing points, often used in toy peep shows. An extremely delicate silk square of a mythological Chinese lion, likely used as a gift wrapper (fukusa), will also be included, in a rare public display of the fragile work. An illustrated publication will accompany the exhibition.
Relevant research areas: East Asia, 19th Century, Relief printing
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 05/13/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Machine Age Modernism: Prints from the Daniel Cowin Collection

Jay A. Clarke.
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA, United States. 02/28/2015 - 05/17/2015.
Machine Age Modernism, a special presentation of prints from the Daniel Cowin Collection, captures the tumultuous aesthetic and political climate of the years before, during, and after World Wars I and II in Britain. Today known as the Machine Age, this was an era that embraced industry and mechanization. New modes of communication and transportation infused with the aura of speed and efficiency—radios, trains, automobiles, airplanes—transformed the landscape of the country.

This exhibition features a wide range of vanguard imagery produced during the period, including themes such as cityscapes, war, industrial technology, rural farming, sport, and leisure activity. During World War I, two British printmakers, Edward Wadsworth and C. R. W. Nevinson, depicted Britain’s military efforts, portraying soldiers at the front, war ships, and manufacturing projects in support of the war effort. In the following decades, another group of artists began to explore their changing world with a new medium, the linocut. Students at the progressive Grosvenor School of Modern Art in London learned to make prints from common linoleum flooring. Sybil Andrews, Claude Flight, Lill Tschudi, and others made technically experimental prints whose vibrant colors and geometric forms bridged abstraction and representation. They chose to embrace craft-like execution that encouraged simplicity. The works featured in this exhibition are filled with the energy and excitement of the Machine Age and exemplify how artists found inspiration in the modern world.

All works in the exhibition are from the Daniel Cowin Collection.
Relevant research areas: Western Europe, 20th Century, Relief printing
External Link
Art Market News Posted: 05/13/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Ann Arbor Antiquarian Book Fair

Antiquarian Booksellers' Association of America
Ann Arbor, MI, United States
05/17/2015
The 37th annual Ann Arbor Antiquarian Book Fair returns to the Ballroom of the Michigan Union at 530 S. State Street in Ann Arbor (map) on Sunday, May 17, 2015, from 11am to 5pm. Plan now to come out to see some 40 booksellers, map and print dealers gathered in one location.

You will find first editions, old and collectible books, literature, children’s books, Americana, prints and more. Your $5 admission fee benefits the William L. Clements Library at the University of Michigan.

For more information (on attending or exhibiting at the fair), contact the book fair director Jay Platt at the West Side Book Shop in Ann Arbor (113 W. Liberty, Ann Arbor MI 48104), ph. (734) 995-1891, or via email.
Relevant research areas: Western Europe, Medieval, Renassiance, Baroque, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, Contemporary, Book arts
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 05/12/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Beautifully Obscene: The History of the Erotic Print

Studio 3 Gallery, Canterbury, Kent, United Kingdom. 05/15/2015 - 06/12/2015.
Studio 3 Gallery is pleased to present Beautifully Obscene: The History of the Erotic Print. Featuring over 30 works from across Europe and Japan and spanning the course of 500 years, the exhibition incorporates the different approaches used by artists in order to explore themes of sexuality, gender roles and power. The show explores Sir Kenneth Clark’s famous distinction between the socially-acceptable ‘nude’, and the socially-pejorative ‘naked’ body, with the majority of the works included arguably belonging to the latter category. Beautifully Obscene will not only present viewers with a comprehensive study of the aesthetics of the human form and sexuality, but will also challenge our deeply ingrained discomfort with erotic visual representations, and suggest that beauty can in fact be found in the obscene.

Prints have historically been affordable ways to rapidly and economically reproduce and disseminate images, and this has created a rich legacy of erotic art. As well as showing how these themes have evolved across centuries and continents, this exhibition will also document how the viewers’ relationship to the image has shifted over time. Many of the older examples in the show come from books or pamphlets where they could be viewed intimately and privately. More recent and contemporary works were intended to be shown in a gallery setting, so expand the scale of the body, confronting the viewer directly.

The featured artists have represented motifs such as the classical nude of Western Antiquity, modern French eroticism, through to the explicit prints of 18th century Japanese Shunga, and contemporary meditations on the human form and sexuality. This exhibition explores what we reveal and what we conceal, and the hidden educational and religious connotations that the erotic can harbor. It questions societal fears of the explicit and the pornographic, tackling themes of sexuality, gender and the role of the erotic in a diverse range of cultures and eras. The principle aim of Beautifully Obscene is to study the aesthetics of the human form and sexuality; in order to challenge the deeply ingrained preconceptions against erotic visual representations, and to emphasize that beauty can in fact be found in the obscene.

Artists include: Pietro Aquila, Pietro Santi Bartoli, Monika Beisner, Jan de Bisschop, Emma Bradford, Simone Cantarini, Stephen Chambers, Marianne Clouzot, Gabriel Dauchot, Angele Delasalle, Roland Delcol ,Amandine Dore, Tracey Emin, Brad Faine, Henri Fantin-Latour, Valentin Le Fevre, Ian Hamilton Finlay, Othon Friesz, Frans de Geetre, Paul Guiramand, Sarah Hardacre, William Hogarth, Anita Klein, Rudolf Koch, Antonio Lafrery, Martin Van Maele , Albert Marquet, Henri Matisse, Patricia Nik-Dad, Pablo Picasso, André Provot, Felicien Rops, Berthommé de Saint-André, Alex Varenne, Marcel Vertes , Denis Volx, Lucas Vorsterman, and Shane Wheatcroft.

This exhibition has been organised by students from the Print Collecting and Curating Module at the University of Kent’s School of Arts. This course gives students the opportunity both to curate a museum-quality exhibition of their design and to acquire prints for the Kent Print Collection. In thinking about this exhibition, this year’s students wished to address the lack of erotic art in the permanent collection and to explore the rich and varied history of sensuality and eroticism depicted in print.
Relevant research areas: North America, Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Medieval, Renassiance, Baroque, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, Contemporary, Book arts, Collograph, Digital printmaking, Engraving, Etching, Letterpress, Lithography, Monoprinting, Papermaking, Relief printing, Screenprinting
External Link
Conference or Symposium Announcement Posted: 05/12/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Print Think 2015: Mutable Matrix

Tyler Printmaking
Tyler School of Art
Philadelphia, PA, United States
05/16/2015, 9-6 pm
Tyler Printmaking is pleased to present this year’s Print Think conference, titled Mutable Matrix, on Saturday, May 16. Whether they call what they are producing variable editions, mono-prints, drawings, or something else entirely, contemporary printmakers have increasingly found something plastic within the frozen gestures of their plate, stone, block, or screen. This vision of the matrix as mutable has offered artists a new means of exploring the tension between the gestural and graphic. Traditionally, the gold standard of print production has been the edition—a series of identical prints in which the matrix is the means and the map by which artists finesse a number of uncanny duplicates. The mutable matrix allows for a new sense of play, a new found exploration of chance and intuition within the very process of printing the page, while new ways of working often escape the page altogether.

Please join us in this exploration, conversation, and celebration of the ways printmakers have broken rules, hacked procedures, gone off the rails, and/or invented new ways of working in which the sanctity of the copy has been superseded by a curiosity about the possible.

The conference features: Kathan Brown, Founding Director of Crown Point discussing her work with John Cage, Amy Ingrid Schlegel, Director of Galleries at Tufts University discussing the work of Nancy Spero, artists Rob Swaniston, and Ken Wood and a tour of the Richard Tuttle exhibition at the Fabric Workshop.. We will end our day at The Print Center with gallery talks by artist Ken Wood on his work and John Caperton, the Jensen Bryan Curator on the Michael Mazur exhibition. A reception will follow.
Relevant research areas: North America, Contemporary, Book arts, Collograph, Digital printmaking, Engraving, Etching, Letterpress, Lithography, Monoprinting, Papermaking, Relief printing, Screenprinting
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 05/12/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Richard Tuttle: Both/And Richard Tuttle Print and Cloth

The Fabric Workshop and Museum, Philadelphia, PA, United States. 05/15/2015 - 08/31/2015.
Exhibiting artist(s): Richard Tuttle.
The Fabric Workshop and Museum (FWM) proudly presents the Philadelphia premiere of Both/And Richard Tuttle Print and Cloth. This unique, mulitfaceted installation of over five decades of work—from the mid-1960s to present—was conceived by Richard Tuttle, offering one of the most comprehensive experiences ever of this influential, contemporary American artist, who has a long history of collaboration with FWM, beginning in 1978 shortly after the Museum was founded by Artistic Director Marion Boulton Stroud. This installation will feature work from Tuttle’s two landmark textile and print surveys that originated in 2014: “Richard Tuttle: I Don’t Know . The Weave of Textile Language,” organized by Whitechapel Gallery in association with Tate Modern, London; and “Richard Tuttle: A Print Retrospective,” Bowdoin College Museum of Art, Maine, as well as the international premiere of new kimono work by the artist.

Currently an Artist-in-Residence at FWM, Tuttle’s new kimono work Extraordinary from this 2014-2015 residency will be on view in this major exhibition. The hand-sewn yukatas, or summer kimonos, are made of Sarashi cloth, a traditional Japanese cotton fabric. There are two editions of 20 plus 4 artist proofs, one for men and one for woman. The design and pattern in this edition of new work are Chusen dyed, a traditional Japanese method of dyeing using stencil paper, by Miyamoto Co., Ltd., in Osaka, Japan. The pattern in the woman’s yukata design is rotated 90 degrees when compared with the man’s design. As Tuttle stated in a conversation with the FWM studio staff, “By changing direction of the bars, dynamic energy is achieved.”

An exhibition brochure with an introduction by Marion Boulton Stroud, and contributions by FWM’s Artistic Advisor Mark Rosenthal and Curators Magnus af Petersens and Christina von Rotenhan, accompanies Tuttle’s dynamic work, which exists in the space between painting, sculpture, poetry, assemblage, drawing, and printmaking. The brochure checklist will pair the works of art on view with poems by the artist that are directly inspired by his pieces.
Relevant research areas: North America, 20th Century
External Link
General Announcement Posted: 05/12/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Bibliothèque Nationale makes publication on early Italian printmaking available online

Paris, France
The Bibliothèque Nationale de France recently posted the text "Les premières gravures italiennes.
Quattrocento-début du cinquecento. Inventaire de la collection du département des Estampes et de la Photographie" online, accessible via the link below. This is the first print-related text of numerous BN publications that have recently been made available via openedition.org.
Relevant research areas: Western Europe, Renassiance, Engraving, Etching
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 05/06/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Homar: Art Binding Ties from Puerto Rico

Pedro Juan Hernández.
Room 120, Centro Library, Silberman School of Social Work, 2180 Third Avenue at 119th Street New York, NY 10035, New York, NY, United States. 05/14/2015 - 09/30/2015.
Exhibiting artist(s): Lorenzo Homar.
Centro proudly presents this exhibit highlighting artist Lorenzo Homar’s legacy within the art world. The showcase exhibit Homar: Art Binding Ties from Puerto Rico to NYC features selected artwork acquired through donations made to the archives. Also available for public viewing: an interview with Homar conducted by the Centro Oral History staff in 1983 as well as other documents from our Archives.

The exhibit runs from May 14 to September 30, 2015, and begins with the roundtable discussion on May 14 from 6-7:15 pm

The Puerto Rican Diaspora/Lorenzo Homar y la Diáspora puertorriqueña: 1928–1950.
Participants include Arcadio Díaz-Quiñones, emeritus professor at Princeton University, and Antonio Martorell, artist and Homar pupil, as well as Lena Burgos–Lafuente, professor of Hispanic Languages and Literature at SUNY Stony Brook, and Cristina Pérez Jiménez, a graduate student of Latin American and Iberian Cultures at Columbia University. They will discuss the social, political and cultural evolution that influenced Homar with the following presentations:

Arcadio Díaz-Quiñones Introduction. Lorenzo Homar: What Happens When We Put Diaspora and the Left at the Center?

Lena Burgos-Lafuente Etching Dissent: On Homar’s Ways of Seeing

Antonio Martorell Lorenzo, Larry, Lorenzo in three times

Cristina C. Pérez Jiménez “Esos eran años muy politizados”: Lorenzo Homar's Schooling in Socially-engaged Art
Relevant research areas: North America, South America, 20th Century, Etching, Screenprinting
External Link
Lecture Announcement Posted: 04/14/2015
Posted by: Christina Weyl

Visual Arts Lecture Series

Claire Van Vliet
Organized by Bennington College
Tishman Lecture Hall, Bennington College, 1 College Dr
Bennington, VT, United States
05/05/2015, 7:30-9:00pm
Claire Van Vliet is a fine artist, illustrator, and typographer who founded Janus Press in San Diego, CA, in 1955. Van Vliet has been crafting intricate handmade books in the Northeast Kingdom for decades. Her vision and craftsmanship is internationally respected. For this artist, the medium is the message.
Relevant research areas: North America, 20th Century, Contemporary, Relief printing
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