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Exhibition Information Posted: 01/23/2023
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Bearing Witness? Violence and Trauma on Paper

The Fitzwilliam Museum, Cambridge, United Kingdom. 01/10/2023 - 04/02/2023.
Spanning almost 400 years, this display of prints and drawings explores some of the ways artists have responded to political violence and social injustice. Drawn from collections at the Fitzwilliam Museum and the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, the display surveys different forms of witnessing: works by artists who had direct experience of horrors, or who grew up in the shadow of terrible events; those who were commissioned to give visual form to the words of others, and those who assimilate in their work the trauma of distant ordeals.

The display asks us to think about how violence can be understood or appreciated through art. These artists bear witness to the collectivity of violence, but their works are also about looking. Each tries to draw us in to contemplate their challenging image, sometimes with the intention to shock, but always with the intention to mesmerize. What does it mean to witness violence even at a remove, even years after the events depicted?

The display showcases a recent acquisition of 20 prints by contemporary artist, Marcelle Hanselaar, and is juxtaposed alongside other historic, modern, and contemporary prints and drawings from the permanent collection and loans from the Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology, including works by the Chapman Brothers, Goya, Jane Joseph, Manet, Picasso, and Judy Watson.

Bearing Witness? contains images of trauma, violence, and death.
Relevant research areas: 20th Century, Contemporary
External Link
Collection News Posted: 01/23/2023
Posted by: Benjamin Dunham

Emil Jacobi “Re-proofs” go to Library Company of Philadelphia

Benjamin S. Dunham Collection of Emil Jacobi Re-Proofs
Philadelphia, PA, United States
In November, Ben Dunham's collection of phototype (collotype) “re-proofs” by Emil Jacobi went to their new home in the Graphic Arts Department at the Library Company of Philadelphia. Jacobi once ran the printing facility of Philadelphia photographer Frederick Gutekunst. Jacobi came to Ben’s attention because his reproductions of J. Alphege Brewer’s 1914 etchings of Rheims Cathedral and copies by other printers became the “go-to” art for Americans who supported the Allies or had a family member serving in WWI. Visit Ben’s website devoted to Brewer’s life and work at www.jalphegebrewer.info/
jacobi-re-proofs. With luck and persistence, his extensive collection of Brewer etchings will find a similarly caring repository.
Relevant research areas: North America, 20th Century
External Link
General Announcement Posted: 01/23/2023
Posted by: Amanda Lahikainen

Money and Materiality

Ogunquit, Maine, ME, United States
The University of Delaware Press published the book Money and Materiality in the Golden Age of Graphic Satire (2022), by Amanda Lahikainen, as part of the series Studies in Seventeenth- and Eighteenth-Century Art and Culture.
Relevant research areas: North America, 18th Century, Book arts, Engraving, Etching
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 01/14/2023
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Muñecas de Cartón

Ni Santas Collective.
Self-Help Graphics, Los Angeles, CA, United States. 01/21/2023 - 03/03/2023.
Muñecas de Cartón is a six-year survey of the artists' collective Ni Santas' collaborative artistic practice drawing from their founding in 2016 to 2022. Inspired by the feminist artist Rotmi Enciso, Ni Santas is an autonomous all Women of Color collective whose mission is to create socially conscious visual narratives and promote sisterhood through skill sharing.

Muñecas de Cartón presents the intentional, yet spontaneous, joint effort between women artists to create, be heard, and be seen. The title is derived from the collective's extensive use of cardboard as their medium and the ephemeral context in which the work was created–– site and event specific. The exhibition features installations, prints, flyers, photos, and protest signs made by the different members throughout its six years, demonstrating the collective's bluntness, activist ideology, and passion for elevating women's voices.
Relevant research areas: Contemporary
External Link
Lecture Announcement Posted: 01/11/2023
Posted by: Lauren Warner

WEBINAR: Without affiliation: Iliazd and avant-garde identity politics

Johanna Drucker
Organized by Lauren Warner-Treloar (Kingston University) and Dr. Louise Hardiman (Independent Scholar)
Hosted by Kingston School of Art's Visual and Material Culture Research Centre
Kingston Upon Thames, United Kingdom
01/23/2023, 5-6:30pm (UK time)
Born in Tiflis [Tbilisi], Georgia in 1894, while the area was part of the Russian Empire, poet Ilia Zdanevich (“Iliazd”), seems to have felt little identification with the region. If he spoke Georgian (his mother’s native tongue), he gave no indication of this in his writings. After 1912, he moved into Russian avant-garde circles in Moscow and St. Petersburg. But he also “discovered” the self-taught Georgian painter, Nikos Pirosmani. He was passionate about ancient Armenian and Georgian church architecture. He loved the mountains of the Caucasus region. However, he did not express any affiliation as a “Georgian” or mention the politics of the region in his work, only noting that after the Revolution in October 1917 he was prevented from returning to Russia. His early experimental plays, composed between 1916-20, identify Tiflis as their publication site. But he never mentions the interlude from May 1918 through February 1921, when Georgia was briefly an independent republic before being annexed by the Soviet Union, or the name change of his birthplace to Tbilisi in 1936. Iliazd travelled to Paris in 1921 and spent the rest of his life there as a publisher and poet. Linked to international art circles, Iliazd’s career raises interesting questions about the combination of local culture(s) (Georgian, Russian, Parisian) and national identity politics in the modern avant-garde.

Speaker: Johanna Drucker is Distinguished Professor and Breslauer Professor in the Department of Information Studies at UCLA. She is internationally known for her work in the history of graphic design, typography, experimental poetry, art, and digital humanities. Recent work includes Inventing the Alphabet (University of Chicago, 2022), Visualisation L’Interprétation modélisante (B42, 2020), and Iliazd: Meta-Biography of a Modernist (Johns Hopkins University Press 2020). Her artist’s books are widely represented in museum and library collections. She was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2014. In 2021 she received the AIGA’s Steven Heller Award for Cultural Criticism.

The first of seven events in the series:

From Tallinn to Tbilisi: Art Across Boundaries in the Age of Empire

Through the long nineteenth century until the eventual collapse of the Russian Empire in 1917, artists in territories under imperial control, such as Poland, Finland, Ukraine, the Baltics, the Caucasus, Central Asia and others, increasingly began to explore questions of national identity in response to hegemonic and Russo-centric narratives advanced by the tsarist regime. In this seminar series, speakers examine art production in key centres of activity beyond St Petersburg and Moscow to present perspectives from across the Empire. Exploring a range of topics, such as art education, travel, national revivals, and women's advancement, they consider the ways in which artists negotiated ethnic and territorial identities, advanced their professional careers, and recalibrated their art-making in response to imperial rule.

Mondays, 5-6:30pm (UK) / 6-7:30pm (CET) / 12-1:30pm (EST)
Teams, Free
Recording available after each event
Relevant research areas: Eastern Europe, 20th Century, Book arts
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 01/11/2023
Posted by: Rachel Skokowski

Documenting Dreams: Juana Estrada Hernández and Humberto Saenz

Rachel Skokowski.
The Janet Turner Print Museum, Chico, CA, United States. 01/24/2023 - 04/01/2023.
Exhibiting artist(s): Juana Estrada Hernández, Humberto Saenz.
For Juana Estrada Hernández and Humberto Saenz, the personal is always political. Weaving their life experiences as Mexican-American immigrants into their work, both artists offer a powerful reflection on the reality of the American dream today. Together, their prints explore notions of home, expose the fine line between assimilation and erasure, and speak to the necessity of cultural pride.

The Turner is proud to present this exhibition at Chico State, a Hispanic-Serving Institution (HSI), and invites students, faculty, and the community to engage with the vital themes on display in the work of these two exciting new voices.
Relevant research areas: North America, South America, Contemporary, Etching, Lithography, Relief printing, Screenprinting
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 01/10/2023
Posted by: Mary Weaver Chapin

Human | Nature: 150 Years of Japanese Landscape Prints

Helen Swift.
Portland Art Museum, Portland, OR, United States. 12/03/2022 - 05/07/2023.
Selected from the Portland Art Museum’s permanent collection, this exhibition explores Japan’s journey with and through nature during the 19th century and into the modern age through the lens of landscape prints, revealing the at once reverential and playful spirit in which people held the trees, mountains, and rivers around them.

World-renowned print artists Katsushika Hokusai (1760–1849) and Utagawa Hiroshige (1797–1858) mirrored and molded people’s relationship with nature, inviting them to roam remote mountain passes interspersed with vertiginous waterfalls, or reflect on the lyrical beauty of legendary meisho (famous places). These artists show us how nature can awe and inspire, as in Hokusai’s magisterial tribute to Japan’s most revered peak, the Thirty-six Views of Mt. Fuji. Hiroshige’s snapshots of urban flora and fauna in the series One Hundred Famous Views of Edo also capture how nature charms and surprises as it insinuates itself into city life.

Later woodblock prints reveal that landscape continued to play a pivotal role in the lives and identity of Japanese people into the 20th century. Nature wreaked havoc on human life in the Great Kantō Earthquake of 1923, as dramatically visualized in prints by Nishizawa Tekiho (1889–1965) and his colleagues, but it also offered sites of enduring cultural memory and solace in a hectic modern age. This exhibition visualizes just some of the many ways in which the human-nature relationship has unfolded in Japan.

A selection of prints by American and Japanese artists working in the Pacific Northwest, including Gordon Gilkey (1912–2000) and Sekino Jun’ichirō (1914–1988), are also showcased in this exhibition, suggesting how the human affinity for nature transcends time and place and resonates with us here and now in Portland.
Relevant research areas: East Asia, 19th Century, 20th Century, Contemporary, Relief printing
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 12/27/2022
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Nicole Eisenman: Prince

Print Center New York, New York, NY, . 02/09/2023 - 06/01/2023.
Nicole Eisenman: Prince focuses on Eisenman’s inventive experimentation and deep engagement with printmaking since 2010. Celebrated for her painting and, more recently, her work in sculpture, Eisenman has also produced a significant body of prints spanning lithographs, etchings, woodcuts, and monotypes. These works evidence the voracious range of references, imagery, and styles for which the artist is known. They also show how Eisenman has pushed these mediums, engaging materials, surfaces, and mark making in unexpected ways. Made in close collaboration with the New York–based print workshops Harlan & Weaver, Jungle Press, and 10 Grand Press, the works in Prince demonstrate how printmaking has been a generative space for experimentation within Eisenman’s broader practice.

Nicole Eisenman: Prince was originally organized by Loretta Yarlow at the University Museum of Contemporary Art at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. The presentation at Print Center New York is organized by Jenn Bratovich and Judy Hecker.
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 12/26/2022
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Printmaking in the Twenty-First Century

Detroit Institute of the Arts, Detroit, MI, United States. 10/21/2022 - 04/09/2023.
The Detroit Institute of Arts presents Printmaking in the Twenty-First Century, an exhibition that celebrates the range and ingenuity of artwork by contemporary printmakers, featuring more than 60 prints, posters and artists’ books by local, national and international artists, such as Hernan Bas, Susan Goethel Campbell, Enrique Chagoya, Marc Dion, Nicole Eisenman, Walton Ford, Chitra Ganesh, Rashid Johnson, Julie Mehretu, Michael Menchaca, Ryan Standfest, Katia Santibañez, James Siena, Dyani White Hawk, Ai Weiwei and more. This exhibition features works using the latest digital tools, techniques used in the fifteenth century, and a combination of these methods, and highlights many works recently acquired by the DIA.

Learn more about the exhibition at the link below.
Relevant research areas: Contemporary
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 12/26/2022
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Bookworks: Selected Recent Acquisitions, 2012 – 2022

Legion of Honor, San Francisco, CA, United States. 01/07/2023 - 04/16/2023.
Beginning in the 1970s, Chicagoans Reva and David Logan assembled a remarkable collection of modern artist-illustrated books, which they gave to the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco in 1998. The collection resides in our home for works on paper, the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts, forming the core of our extensive holding of these hybrid works of art. This exhibition, together with the inaugural exhibition in the Legion of Honor’s new works on paper gallery, presents recent gifts from the Logan family and other generous donors, as well as recent museum purchases. Highlights include two books illustrated by Pablo Picasso and important contemporary works. These recent additions strengthen and extend our collection of this vibrant and engaging artform, the artist’s book.

External Link
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All content c. 2026 Association of Print Scholars