Art Market News
Posted: 09/15/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars
NY Art Book Fair
Printed Matter, MoMA PS1
Long Island City,
NY, United States
09/18/2015
Free and open to the public, the NY Art Book Fair is the world’s premier event for artists’ books, catalogs, monographs, periodicals and zines.
Exhibition Information
Posted: 09/15/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars
Whistler in the World: The Lunder Collection of James McNeill Whistler at the Colby College Museum of Art
Colby College Museum of Art,
Waterville,
ME, United States.
09/24/2015 -
01/10/2016.
Exhibiting artist(s): James McNeill Whistler.
In his Ten O’Clock Lecture in 1885, James McNeill Whistler (American, 1834-1903) presented himself as an artist set apart from the public, bearing no relation to the historical moment he lived in. However, the myth of artistic independence that Whistler developed was but one part of a complex and highly significant relationship he had with the world around him. As a painter, printmaker, and designer, Whistler engaged with a variety of places, people, and ideas that stretched from the United States to London, Venice, and Japan. Drawn entirely from the renowned Lunder Collection, this comprehensive exhibition—featuring the finest examples of his prints among works in other media—explores Whistler’s travels across Europe in his quest to re-imagine his surroundings and to transport the modern world into the “realm of art.”
Exhibition Information
Posted: 09/15/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars
20th Retrospective: Highlights From The Past 20 Years
Center for Contemporary Printmaking,
Norwalk,
CT, United States.
09/12/2015 -
12/13/2015.
This retrospective exhibition features prints from artists who have been integral to the Center for Contemporary Printmaking’s history.
Relevant research areas: 20th Century, Contemporary
Conference or Symposium Announcement
Posted: 09/15/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars
Symposium: Rembrandt’s Changing Impressions
Robert Fucci
Schermerhorn Hall, 6th Floor, Room 612
New York,
NY, United States
11/05/2015,
3-6pm
The symposium will bring together an international group of art historians and curators interested in Rembrandt's graphic experimentation to reflect on the newest scholarship in the field.
Organized and moderated by Robert Fucci
With:
Clifford Ackley, Curator of Prints and Drawings, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Stephanie S. Dickey, Bader Chair in Northern Baroque Art, Queen's University,
Kingston, Ontario
Jan Piet Filedt Kok, Professor of Studio Practices, University of Amsterdam, former Senior Curator of Early Netherlandish painting, Rijksmuseum
Erik Hinterding, Curator of Prints, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
Nadine Orenstein, Drue Heinz Curator in Charge, Department of Drawings and Prints, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
RSVP: https://calendar.columbia.edu/sundial/webapi/register.php?eventID=79770®ISTER_SESSION_NAME=d34fdf4c36bf2714796c7ea7694c7cb6&state=init&
Organized and moderated by Robert Fucci
With:
Clifford Ackley, Curator of Prints and Drawings, Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Stephanie S. Dickey, Bader Chair in Northern Baroque Art, Queen's University,
Kingston, Ontario
Jan Piet Filedt Kok, Professor of Studio Practices, University of Amsterdam, former Senior Curator of Early Netherlandish painting, Rijksmuseum
Erik Hinterding, Curator of Prints, Rijksmuseum, Amsterdam
Nadine Orenstein, Drue Heinz Curator in Charge, Department of Drawings and Prints, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
RSVP: https://calendar.columbia.edu/sundial/webapi/register.php?eventID=79770®ISTER_SESSION_NAME=d34fdf4c36bf2714796c7ea7694c7cb6&state=init&
Conference or Symposium Announcement
Posted: 09/14/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars
Colloque : Cataloguer l’objet multiple. Sculpture, estampe, photographie
INHA within the Carte Blanche at the University of Poitiers
Auditorium Colbert Gallery
Paris,
France
09/28/2015-09/30/2015,
TBA
Sculpture, printmaking and photography are essentially multiple, often experiencing many prints as much as all three stem from a matrix that can be changed and give rise to significant variations. Complex objects, they hold both of the original work, interpretation or copying; in this they often confuse lovers and art historians attached to the study of other art forms. They ask specific questions of the rest. Their multi-purpose character does not mask their own characteristics.
Tool and fundamental genre of art history, the catalog has recently been a number of studies. While the paintings and drawings catalogs are the first to have benefited from this research, for "multiple", the field is still little discussed, because of the difficulties posed by the very nature of the objects concerned.
What are the first catalogs multiple objects, how were they treated these objects, compared to unique items, what were the first editors and first uses? What challenges and what choices for catalogs of this type, even today?
Scientific Committee:
Claire Barbillon (University of Poitiers), Véronique Meyer (University of Poitiers), Sylvie Aubenas (National Library of France), Cecilia Hurley Griener (École du Louvre), Valerie Sweat-Hermel (National Library of France), Pierre Wachenheim (University Lorraine), and Anne-Élisabeth Buxtorf (Library INHA)
28, 29 and September 30, 2015
Auditorium Colbert Gallery
Free admission, limited seating available
2, rue
Vivienne, 75002 Paris
Tool and fundamental genre of art history, the catalog has recently been a number of studies. While the paintings and drawings catalogs are the first to have benefited from this research, for "multiple", the field is still little discussed, because of the difficulties posed by the very nature of the objects concerned.
What are the first catalogs multiple objects, how were they treated these objects, compared to unique items, what were the first editors and first uses? What challenges and what choices for catalogs of this type, even today?
Scientific Committee:
Claire Barbillon (University of Poitiers), Véronique Meyer (University of Poitiers), Sylvie Aubenas (National Library of France), Cecilia Hurley Griener (École du Louvre), Valerie Sweat-Hermel (National Library of France), Pierre Wachenheim (University Lorraine), and Anne-Élisabeth Buxtorf (Library INHA)
28, 29 and September 30, 2015
Auditorium Colbert Gallery
Free admission, limited seating available
2, rue
Vivienne, 75002 Paris
APS News
Posted: 09/14/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars
APS Inaugural Symposium
New York,
NY, United States
November 7, 2015
10 am – 6 pm
Hunter College
Hunter West 615 Lecture Hall
For a map of the campus, please visit: http://www.hunter.cuny.edu/visitorscenter/repository/images/68thStreet.jpg
695 Park Ave., New York, NY 10065
This symposium will support new critical ideas and research about printmaking. The morning session features graduate students speaking about dissertation research. The afternoon panel centers on the relationship between the technical choices made by printmakers, printers, or publishers in order to rethink the connections between process, material, and meaning in the graphic arts. Afternoon speakers include: Iris Moon (Pratt Institute), Thomas Primeau (Baltimore Museum of Art), Ad Stijnman (Herzog August Library), Yelizaveta Sorokin (Harvard Art Museums), Anne Verplanck (Penn State University), Claire Whitner (Davis Museum at Wellesley College), and Elizabeth Wyckoff (Saint Louis Art Museum).
A more detailed schedule is forthcoming.
You may come for all or part of the day, as your schedule permits. Although not required, we would appreciate your advance registration for the event in order to estimate attendance (click on "external link" below).
The Inaugural Symposium of the Association of Print Scholars is the first event of a two-part series held in collaboration with Ars Graphica. The series, entitled "New Impressions: Emerging Research on Prints," aims to shed light on innovative research currently being completed around the globe about the graphic arts. The second part of the series, sponsored by Ars Graphica, will take place in Spring 2016 at the Instituto Centrale per la Grafica in Rome and will feature the theme "Curating graphic arts! Le arti grafiche al museo."
10 am – 6 pm
Hunter College
Hunter West 615 Lecture Hall
For a map of the campus, please visit: http://www.hunter.cuny.edu/visitorscenter/repository/images/68thStreet.jpg
695 Park Ave., New York, NY 10065
This symposium will support new critical ideas and research about printmaking. The morning session features graduate students speaking about dissertation research. The afternoon panel centers on the relationship between the technical choices made by printmakers, printers, or publishers in order to rethink the connections between process, material, and meaning in the graphic arts. Afternoon speakers include: Iris Moon (Pratt Institute), Thomas Primeau (Baltimore Museum of Art), Ad Stijnman (Herzog August Library), Yelizaveta Sorokin (Harvard Art Museums), Anne Verplanck (Penn State University), Claire Whitner (Davis Museum at Wellesley College), and Elizabeth Wyckoff (Saint Louis Art Museum).
A more detailed schedule is forthcoming.
You may come for all or part of the day, as your schedule permits. Although not required, we would appreciate your advance registration for the event in order to estimate attendance (click on "external link" below).
The Inaugural Symposium of the Association of Print Scholars is the first event of a two-part series held in collaboration with Ars Graphica. The series, entitled "New Impressions: Emerging Research on Prints," aims to shed light on innovative research currently being completed around the globe about the graphic arts. The second part of the series, sponsored by Ars Graphica, will take place in Spring 2016 at the Instituto Centrale per la Grafica in Rome and will feature the theme "Curating graphic arts! Le arti grafiche al museo."
Relevant research areas: North America, South America, Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Medieval, Renassiance, Baroque, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, Contemporary, Book arts, Collograph, Engraving, Etching, Lithography, Monoprinting, Papermaking, Relief printing, Screenprinting
APS News
Posted: 09/11/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars
APS at CAA 2016
Washington,
DC, United States
Relevant research areas: North America, Medieval, Renassiance, Baroque, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, Contemporary, Book arts, Engraving, Etching, Lithography, Monoprinting, Relief printing, Screenprinting
Lecture Announcement
Posted: 09/08/2015
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars
Society of American Graphic Artists Centennial Lecture
Ira Goldberg, David Kiehl, Robert Newman, Michael DiCerbo, and Susan Teller
Organized by Art Students League of New York
Phyllis Harriman Mason Gallery, 215 West 57th Street (between 7th and Broadway)
New York, NY, United States
Phyllis Harriman Mason Gallery, 215 West 57th Street (between 7th and Broadway)
New York, NY, United States
10/27/2015,
6:30-8:00 pm
Moderated by Ira Goldberg, Executive Director, The Art Students League of New York. Panelists David Kiehl, Curator of Prints at the Whitney Museum of American Art; Robert Newman, President of the Old Print Shop; Michael DiCerbo, President of SAGA, and Susan Teller, Susan Teller Gallery, will discuss the history of SAGA in relationship to The Art Students League.
Relevant research areas: North America, 19th Century, 20th Century, Contemporary, Engraving, Etching, Monoprinting, Relief printing, Screenprinting
Exhibition Information
Posted: 09/08/2015
Posted by: Sarita Zaleha
Published by the Artist
Erik Hougen.
International Print Center New York,
New York,
NY, United States.
09/10/2015 -
09/17/2015.
Exhibiting artist(s): Bill Abdale, Beverly Acha, Desiree Adams, Zac Adams-Bliss, Golnar Adili, Fanny Allié, Joseph Aloi, BJ Alumbaugh, Denise Amses, Silvina Arismendi, ASVP, Felipe Baeza, Bryan Christopher Baker, Glen Baldridge, Amy Barkow, David Barthold, Evan Bellantone, Guy Ben-Ari, Anders Bergstrom, Megan Berk, Edwin Bethea, Josh Bindewald, Sonya Blesofsky, Theresa Bloise, Jon Bocksel, Sascha Braunig, Noah Breuer, Sarah Carpenter, Blake Carrington, Nathan Catlin, Andrew Chan, Deb Chaney, Laura Charlton, Noa Charuvi, Terri Chiao & Adam Frezza, Katie Commodore, Matthew Conradt, Mary Cosh, Maia Cruz Palileo, Paul DeRuvo, Kelly Driscoll, Julia Elsas, Ana Fernandez, Ivan Forde, Mark Franchino, Caleb Freese, Beka Goedde, Kate Goyette, Bill Hall, Victoria Haven, Wright Harvey, Elana Herzog, Erik Hougen, Rhia Hurt, Justin Israels, Amy Jacobs, Craig Kaths, Matt Keegan, Jane Kent, Daniel Kingery, Charles Koegel, David Kramer, Karl LaRocca, Marco Lawrence, Dana Lemoine, Hye Jeong Lee, Kaitlin Leung, Allison Lindblom, Sharon Lindenfeld, Erika Lipkes, Jebediah Long, Eric LoPresti, Troy Lovegates, Rita MacDonald, Kieran Madden, Sara Magenheimer, Amanda Manitach, Elise Margolis, Becky Marie, Esperanza Mayobre, Martin Mazorra, Arturo Meade, Elizabeth Meggs, Florian Meisenberg, Andrew Mockler, Donna Moran, Michael Neff, Miho Ogai, Tomomi Ono, Seamus Liam O'Brien, Bridget Parris, Ester Partegàs, Bundith Phunsombatlert, Anthony Picarelli, David Pierce, Ben Pinder, Miryam Prodanovic, Lina Puerta, Christina Pumo, Krystal Quiles, Jay Riggio, Elle Rotstein, Patrick Rowe, Alan Ruiz, Jeremy Ruiz, Justin Sanz, Sarah Shebaro, Mae Shore, Anita Sidler, Kyle Simon, Tiffany Smith, Russ Spitkovsky, Charles Spitzack, Melissa Staiger, Jonathan Stanish, Beth Sutherland, Katsumi Suzuki, Lisa Switalski, Keigo Takahashi, Matt Van Asselt, Daniel Vasquez, Erich Von Hasseln, Jeff Vreeland, Amanda Wachob, Pete Watts, Barbara Westermann, Leah Wolff, Paul Wong, Christine Wong Yap, Robert Yoder, Liz Zanis, Jeremy Zini.
International Print Center New York (IPCNY) presents Published By The Artist, an exhibition and sale of self-published editions organized by Erik Hougen, artist and master printer based in NYC. The works will be on view at 508 West 26th Street, 5th Floor, from September 10th through September 17th, 2015. The prints have been provided by independent artists active in the world of printmaking as printers, academics, and art professionals. Most editions are priced at $300 or less, with proceeds of all sales to be shared equally by the artist and IPCNY to benefit its exhibitions and programming. More than one-hundred artists will be included in the exhibition. IPCNY is grateful to Mr. Hougen and the artists for their generous support of this project.
Exhibition Information
Posted: 09/08/2015
Posted by: Sarita Zaleha
Weaving Past into Present: Experiments in Contemporary Native American Printmaking
Sarah Diver.
International Print Center New York,
New York,
NY, United States.
09/24/2015 -
11/10/2015.
Exhibiting artist(s): Lynne Allen, Rick Bartow, Joe Feddersen, John Hitchcock, Brad Kahlhamer, Jason Lujan, Alan Michelson, Jaune Quick-to-See Smith, Jewel Shaw, Marie Watt, Emmi Whitehorse, Melanie Yazzie.
An exhibition of current prints by Native American artists living and working across North America. Over forty works by twelve artists will be included with techniques ranging from lithography, etching, silkscreen, linocut and monoprint, to three-dimensional multi-media constructions. Affiliations of the artists include Mohawk, Seneca, Navajo, Flathead/Salish, Chiricahua Apache, Cree, Plains Cultures, Colville Confederate Tribes and Wiyot.
International Print Center New York will open its 2015/16 Season with “Weaving Past into Present: Experiments in Contemporary Native American Printmaking”, an exhibition of current prints by Native American artists living and working across North America. Over forty works by twelve artists will be included with techniques ranging from lithography, etching, silkscreen, linocut and monoprint, to three-dimensional multi-media constructions. Affiliations of the artists include Mohawk, Seneca, Navajo, Flathead/Salish, Chiricahua Apache, Cree, Plains Cultures, Colville Confederate Tribes and Wiyot.
“Weaving Past into Present” has been organized in collaboration with Sarah Diver, Project Coordinator, who is contributing the curatorial essay for the exhibition. Ms. Diver writes: “This exhibition focuses on the work of current indigenous printmakers who utilize…history as a visual language…Grounding their work in the images, textures, and experiences of the colonial era, artists layer old and new, past and present to explore how the attitudes which shaped 19th-century policies and practices continue to resonate in popular culture today.”
Workshops represented are Crowís Shadow Press (OR); Hybrid Press (WI); LeRoy Nieman Center for Print Studies (NY); Sitka Center for Art and Ecology (OR); Tamarind Institute (NM); and Vermillion Editions Limited (TX).
International Print Center New York will open its 2015/16 Season with “Weaving Past into Present: Experiments in Contemporary Native American Printmaking”, an exhibition of current prints by Native American artists living and working across North America. Over forty works by twelve artists will be included with techniques ranging from lithography, etching, silkscreen, linocut and monoprint, to three-dimensional multi-media constructions. Affiliations of the artists include Mohawk, Seneca, Navajo, Flathead/Salish, Chiricahua Apache, Cree, Plains Cultures, Colville Confederate Tribes and Wiyot.
“Weaving Past into Present” has been organized in collaboration with Sarah Diver, Project Coordinator, who is contributing the curatorial essay for the exhibition. Ms. Diver writes: “This exhibition focuses on the work of current indigenous printmakers who utilize…history as a visual language…Grounding their work in the images, textures, and experiences of the colonial era, artists layer old and new, past and present to explore how the attitudes which shaped 19th-century policies and practices continue to resonate in popular culture today.”
Workshops represented are Crowís Shadow Press (OR); Hybrid Press (WI); LeRoy Nieman Center for Print Studies (NY); Sitka Center for Art and Ecology (OR); Tamarind Institute (NM); and Vermillion Editions Limited (TX).
Relevant research areas: North America, Etching, Lithography, Monoprinting, Relief printing, Screenprinting