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Conference or Symposium Announcement Posted: 10/23/2021
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

The Interstices of Print: APS-Sponsored Panel at CAA

Association of Print Scholars and College Art Association
Hilton Chicago
Chicago, IL, United States
02/18/2022, 12-1:30 PM
CHAIRS

Sarah Bane
University of California, Santa Barbara

Michelle Donnelly
Yale University

PRESENTATIONS:

- Francesca Kaes (University of Oxford)
"Like a Print: Alexander Cozens’s Inkblots as Interstitial Objects"

- Courtney Wilder (Metropolitan Museum of Art)
"The Interstices of Adaptation: Lithography, Textile Printing, and the Aesthetics of Commercial Expansion around 1820"

- Melissa Trafton (College of the Holy Cross)
"Located in the Block 6E Recreation Hall Barrack: The Silk Screen Shop at Amache"

- Gemma Sharpe (Sarah Lawrence College)
"Graphic Intimacies: Sadequain Naqvi and the Artist’s Book (1966-1971)"

Relevant research areas: North America, Western Europe, South Asia, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, Book arts, Lithography, Screenprinting
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 10/23/2021
Posted by: Laurel Garber

Emma Amos: Color Odyssey

Dr. Shawnya Harris, Laurel Garber.
Philadelphia Museum of Art, Philadelphia, PA, United States. 10/11/2021 - 01/17/2022.
Exhibiting artist(s): Emma Amos.
Across her prolific career as a pioneering artist, educator, and activist, Emma Amos (American, 1937–2020) created boldly colorful and innovative works that explore the intersections of race and gender in American life. This exhibition surveys her body of work from the 1950s to the 2010s for the first time, spotlighting her inventive approach to printmaking, painting, and weaving as well as her signature practice of combining distinctive materials and artistic techniques. Amos’s works investigate identity and privilege while unsettling the lines between figuration and abstraction, craft and fine art, beauty and power.
Relevant research areas: North America, 20th Century, Contemporary, Collograph, Etching, Monoprinting, Relief printing, Screenprinting
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 10/09/2021
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Present Tense: New Prints, 2000–2005

IPCNY, New York City, NY, United States. 09/30/2021 - 12/18/2021.
Present Tense: New Prints, 2000–2005 is an exhibition that celebrates the institution’s 20th anniversary by revisiting works shown at IPCNY in the first five years of its founding New Prints program. From early prints by Julie Mehretu and Beatriz Milhazes to experiments in materiality by Roxy Paine and Melvin Edwards; from the socio-political gestures of Dread Scott and A.J. Bocchino to the technical mastery of Carol Wax and Lothar Osterburg—Present Tense brings together a selection of highlights that reflect just a handful of the practices and players that shaped IPCNY’s early years. It is co-organized by Anne Coffin, IPCNY’s founder and first director; and Deborah Cullen-Morales, currently a program officer at The Mellon Foundation, and previously executive director of The Bronx Museum of the Arts.

“Present Tense has hindsight: these were formative years for a new organization, for a new century, and for artists who were cutting their teeth on printmaking and deepening their commitment to the medium,” says IPCNY director Judy Hecker. “Here, we can re-meet these works that were fresh and formative in their day and remain relevant now.”

In 2000, IPCNY inaugurated its Chelsea exhibition space with New Prints 2000, the first in a free, open-call juried exhibition series designed to democratize access to exhibition opportunities by showing established and emerging artists side by side. Presented between two and four times annually in its early years, the exhibition program had shown some 500 artists by 2005. It aimed to reflect the immediacy, scope, and vitality of print production by the early 2000s, and mapped its networks of workshops, publishers, and printers. IPCNY was also launched in the context of rapidly expanding digital technologies, the post–9/11 political and cultural landscape, and a rapidly shifting and globalizing art world. Representing the vast range of approaches that defines the New Prints program, the works on view in Present Tense contend with identity, migration, materiality, and abstraction as they show how artists navigated the terrain of the early aughts.

For more information please visit the external link below.

Relevant research areas: 20th Century, Contemporary, Book arts, Collograph, Digital printmaking, Engraving, Etching, Letterpress, Lithography, Monoprinting, Papermaking, Relief printing, Screenprinting
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 10/09/2021
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Competing Currents: 20th-Century Japanese Prints

Oliver Ruhl.
The Clark Art Institute, Williamstown, MA, United States. 11/06/2021 - 01/30/2022.
This exhibition explores two parallel Japanese print-making movements through the Clark’s collection of shin-hanga and sōsaku-hanga works. Although conceived in opposition, these two movements became deeply intertwined. By focusing on two key moments in the international exchange of Japanese prints in the twentieth century, the inter-war period and the post-war period, the exhibition considers how travel, tourism, and commercialism intersected within the medium of printmaking during the period.

Shin-hanga, or ‘New Prints,’ reached their zenith of popularity in the 1930s, following a concerted promotional effort by the publisher Watanabe, whose offices in Japan and London, as well as distribution routes to the United States, facilitated a renewed fervor for the Japanese print abroad. Following the model established by famed ukiyo-e printmakers during the Edo Period, shin-hanga prints were created through a collaborative process whereby work was divided amongst the artist, carver, printer, and publisher. The picturesque views of famous places (meishō) of Kawase Hasui and lyrical landscapes and dusk-shrouded street scenes of Yoshida Hiroshi constitute the majority of the Clark’s collection of shin-hanga works. Further, prints within the collection by artists such as Torii Kotondo, Tsuchiya Koitsu, and Takahashi Hiroaki would further add to visitors’ understanding of the movement.

These works will be put into conversation with the Clark’s collection of sōsaku-hanga, or, ‘Creative Prints’. Arising as a direct response to shin-hanga’s popularity, sōsaku hanga artists emphasized their individual agency in creating works of art. Indeed, two works within the collection by the sōsaku-hanga artist Saitō Kiyoshi are coupled with small slips of paper that declare the prints “self-carved and self-printed in Japan.” Although sōsaku-hanga prints did not receive the same amount of attention as their counterparts during the inter-war years, the movement’s works became ubiquitous after WWII.

For more information please visit the external link below.

Relevant research areas: East Asia, 20th Century, Relief printing
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 10/09/2021
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

In the Library: Print Culture and the Arts in Genoa

National Gallery of Art, Washington, DC, United States. 09/27/2021 - 01/07/2022.
Known as La Superba, Genoa was one of Italy’s most prosperous maritime powers in the Mediterranean from the late Middle Ages until the eighteenth century. Genoese naval prowess, critical to the outcome of the Crusades, gave rise to a thriving merchant class and led to the establishment of trading colonies throughout the region. By the sixteenth century, Genoa emerged as one of the foremost banking centers in Europe, and its leading families funded the construction of impressive architectural marvels. Bountiful commissions to decorate these buildings supported a flourishing community of local artists and attracted prominent painters and sculptors from across northern Europe to the Ligurian coast.

Visit the National Gallery of Art Library to see a selection of rare books and works on paper produced in the Republic of Genoa from the end of the sixteenth century to the middle of the eighteenth century. Drawn from the collections and library of the National Gallery, these works range from images of the grand architecture of Genoa’s palaces and mansions to elaborately illustrated editions of Torquato Tasso’s epic poem Gerusalemme liberata, genealogical works about Genoa’s leading families, and biographies of Genoese artists alongside some of their drawings and etchings. Together, these works offer a glimpse into Genoa’s print culture at the height of the baroque period.

For more information please visit the external link below.

Relevant research areas: Western Europe, Renaissance, Baroque, 18th Century, Engraving, Etching
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 10/09/2021
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Pigment of the Soul: Visiting Artist Prints 2019-2021

Halima Taha, PhD.
Brandywine Workshop and Archives, Philadelphia, PA, United States. 10/22/2021 - 01/08/2022.
Gallery Talk: 5:30 PM with Halima Taha, PhD, curator

To register for Gallery Talk please copy and paste the below link into your browser:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/pigment-of-the-soul-gallery-talk-tickets-187043360727?mc_cid=b93c19107e&mc_eid=830ccd574b

Opening Reception: 8–10 PM with wine and cheese
To register for the Reception please copy and paste the below link into your browser:
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/pigment-of-the-soul-opening-reception-tickets-184979567867?mc_cid=b93c19107e&mc_eid=830ccd574b

The exhibit will run from October 22, 2021, through January 8, 2022

The exhibit and events are free, but you must pre-register.

All Guests Must Mask Up!
Relevant research areas: North America, Contemporary, Lithography
Exhibition Information Posted: 10/09/2021
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

The Print Center: Fall 2021 Exhibitions

The Print Center, Philadelphia, PA, United States. 09/24/2021 - 11/13/2021.
Exhibiting artist(s): Anastasia Samoylova, Ivanco Talevski.
The Print Center is pleased to present Anastasia Samoylova: FloodZone and Back and Forth: The Space in Between, a solo show of work by Ivanco Talevski. Originally scheduled for presentation in 2020, the exhibitions were delayed by COVID-19 closures. We are delighted to launch the fall season by welcoming our community back to The Print Center to experience these two impactful and timely shows.

Anastasia Samoylova: FloodZone
We are honored to be the premier venue in the Northeast for FloodZone, which features photographic works that examine the omnipresent effects of climate change in Miami, by the internationally renowned Samoylova. Through photographs capturing the effects of rains and floods, she sounds the alarm on rising sea levels in all coastal areas, including our very own Philadelphia.

Anastasia Samoylova: FloodZone features large-scale photographic works, complemented by an installation of spreads from her recent publication of the same name, that examine the omnipresent effects of climate change on Miami, Florida. Initiated in 2016, the project, which also encompasses a book published in 2019 by Steidl, is an observational study subtly documenting human impact on the tropical landscape. Through photographs capturing the effects of rains and floods, she sounds the alarm on rising sea levels in all coastal areas, including our very own Philadelphia. It does not present us with the familiar images of climate catastrophe, but instead reveals the traces in the everyday – from corners of dilapidated buildings and pools of stagnant water to sidewalks with battered trees and skylines of upturned billboards. Samoylova masterfully wields the photographic tropes of juxtaposition and reflection to create impactful images that reveal the impact of unchecked commercial development on the environment and its human inhabitants, as well as the indigenous flora and fauna. Selections from “FloodZone” have been exhibited widely, including most recently at the Orlando Museum of Art and the Multimedia Art Museum in Moscow, Russia.

Back and Forth: The Space in Between
Back and Forth: The Space in Between is the first major solo show in the United States for Ivanco Talevski, known for his exceptional skill and compelling personal iconography. The exhibition maps the artist’s bifurcated existence between his adopted home of Philadelphia and his birthplace, Bitola, Macedonia. The immersive installation of new prints, drawings, projections and sound works investigates notions of memory, history and belonging, as well as the multiplicity of identities a single individual can embody.

Presented in The Print Center’s second floor galleries, the ambitious exhibition is comprised of an extensive group of new works based in the dualities of Talevski’s personal narrative: his childhood in Communist Yugoslavia and his adulthood in the United States, as well as his travels back-and-forth between his homes in Philadelphia and Bitola, Macedonia. Co-curated by The Print Center’s Executive Director Elizabeth Spungen and its Jensen Bryan Curator Ksenia Nouril, this exhibition reflects on how each of these places evoke the sense of home for Talevski. It includes a recent series of drawings, which he projected onto buildings in Bitola and then photographed. He layers and reseats salient graphic motifs: architectural structures, figures, foliage, mirrors and flags. Their amalgamation creates a space “in between,” an imagined community into which the artist welcomes us.

For more information about both exhibitions please visit the external link below.

Relevant research areas: North America, Western Europe, Eastern Europe, Contemporary
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 10/09/2021
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

A Still Life: Paul Coldwell in Dialogue with Giorgio Morandi

Estorick Collection of Modern Italian Art, London, United Kingdom. 10/06/2021 - 12/19/2021.
This autumn, the Estorick’s entire collection of modern Italian art will go on show throughout the museum’s six galleries in a new exhibition, Estorick Collection Uncut. The top two galleries will be devoted to works by Giorgio Morandi (1890- 1964), and new responses to these by British artist Paul Coldwell (b.1952). This new display, A Still Life: Paul Coldwell in Dialogue with Giorgio Morandi, opens on 6 October and runs until 19 December 2021.

Coldwell’s prints, sculptures and poems, all created in London under lockdown conditions during 2020-21, will be shown alongside the Estorick’s holding of Morandi’s etchings and drawings. Coldwell finds parallels between his own lockdown experience and Morandi’s self-imposed restricted life in Bologna, where he lived and worked. Morandi rarely travelled, and his studio-cum-bedroom in the apartment he shared with his sisters provided the setting for his intimate still lifes. As Coldwell notes, “What for others might be seen as limitations, for Morandi became creative opportunities. His work speaks of the capacity of the imagination to escape from confinement, a sentiment that I hope might be found in my work as well.”

Coldwell’s own plaster and wood sculptures, prints and poems explore lockdown.
One of his poems begins:

Uncanny times.
The city, volume now turned down low,
muted.
uncanny
like Morandi’s bric a brac
quietly arranged in a row

Coldwell’s fascination with Morandi began after learning of his approach to printmaking. This entailed assembling still life objects on makeshift shelves, re- grouping them for days as dust settled, and finally drawing an image on a plate, before making a single immersion in acid. Coldwell points out: “It completely reversed the model of the printmaker as one who is wedded to the print room and
proposed an altogether more conceptual approach. To view Morandi’s prints as fully realised pictures in their own right, gave me confidence by showing that there is nothing to prevent printmaking being of equal importance to painting or sculpture.”

A limited edition boxed set of Coldwell’s poems with photographs of his sculptures will be available to buy from the Estorick Collection.

For more information please visit the external link below.
Relevant research areas: North America, Western Europe, 20th Century, Contemporary, Etching
External Link
General Announcement Posted: 09/26/2021
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

IFPDA Print Month: Daily Lectures

Virtual Event, United States
PRINT MONTH 2021

Print Month returns, October 4 - October 29, with daily online programs at 12 Noon Eastern. The IFPDA is proud to share this platform with our members, our cultural partners, and our community with programs and symposia organized by The Metropolitan Museum of Art, the International Print Center of New York, the Print Council of America, the Association of Print Scholars, and the galleries and publishers of the IFPDA.

Oct. 4: Paupers Press (London); A Virtual Studio Visit and Conversation

Oct. 5: A Conversation on the Impact of Prints in Museum Collections: What Do Museum Directors Say? --- with Michael Govan, Glenn Lowry, Sasha Suda, and Sir Norman Rosenthal

Oct. 6: Prints in Relief; Print Study Day Presented by The Metropolitan Museum of Art; A Census of Italian Renaissance Woodcuts; “To Put Art to the Service of People”: Elizabeth Catlett and Prints for Black Liberation; Linocuts: Making and Meaning

Oct. 7: Full Spectrum: Celebrating 50 years of the Brandywine Workshop and Archives

Oct. 8: Gemini G.E.L Celebrates The Met’s 150th Anniversary --- A Virtual Studio Visit and Conversation

Oct. 11: The Art of To-day: Grosvenor School Linocuts and their Legacy --- A Symposium on the Occasion of “Modern Times: British Prints 1913-1939” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; Perceptive print-making: Grosvenor School linocuts and the middlebrow market

Oct. 12: IFPDA Foundation 2020 Book Award Lecture: Happy Accident: Robert Rauschenberg, Robert Blackburn, & Tatyana Grossman and the Rise of Collaborative Printmaking

Oct. 13: Looking Back on the New York Graphic Workshop, 1964-1970 (sponsored by APS)

Oct. 14: Themes and Variations: Topics from Print Council of America --- Gilbert Stuart, the Print Trade, and the Genesis of Art as Intellectual Property in the United States

Oct. 15: Harlan & Weaver; A Virtual Studio Visit and Conversation with Felix Harlan & Kiki Smith

Oct. 18: The Art of To-day: Grosvenor School Linocuts and their Legacy --- A Symposium on the Occasion of “Modern Times: British Prints 1913-1939” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art

Oct. 19: Highpoint Editions (Minneapolis); A Virtual Studio Visit and Conversation

Oct. 20: El Nopal Press: Cross Border Discourses Through Print (sponsored by APS)

Oct. 21: Themes and Variations: Topics from Print Council of America --- Poetic Science: The Origins of Digital Printmaking

Oct. 22: Breaking Ground, Part I: Pattern and Print with Polly Apfelbaum and Jean-Paul Russell, Durham Press

Oct. 25: The Art of To-day: Grosvenor School Linocuts and their Legacy --- A Symposium on the Occasion of “Modern Times: British Prints 1913-1939” at the Metropolitan Museum of Art; Contemporary and Historical Perspectives on the Market for Grosvenor School Artists; A Discussion with Mary Ryan and Gordon Samuel

Oct. 26: Printmaking in the Expanded Field with Susan Tallman

Oct. 27: Sybil and Cyril: Cutting Through Time with Jenny Uglow, Moderated by Gordon Samuel

Oct. 28: Themes and Variations: Topics from Print Council of America --- Art and the Pull of Print; A Conversation

Oct. 29: Breaking Ground, Part 2: Pattern and Print with Joyce Kozloff and Judith Solodkin, SOLO Impression

For more information on lecture topics and to register please visit the external link below.

Relevant research areas: North America, South America, Western Europe, Eastern Europe, South Asia, East Asia, Africa, Australia, Middle East, Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, Contemporary, Book arts, Collograph, Digital printmaking, Engraving, Etching, Letterpress, Lithography, Monoprinting, Papermaking, Relief printing, Screenprinting
External Link
Exhibition Information Posted: 09/26/2021
Posted by: Association of Print Scholars

Dan Welden: Aesop’s Fables

Ink-Shop Printmaking Center; The New Arts Program, Ithaca, NY and Kutztown, PA, United States. 10/01/2021 - 12/12/2021.
One exhibition, two shows, by Dan Welden divided in separate venues are being shown during the month of October. Noteworthy, the work consists primarily of “Mirror Images” based upon 50 year old large, resurrected, oxidized, corroded zinc plates.
Evolving from natures activity on the zinc, through salt air, raccoon urine and whatever else effected the metal, the 11 sets, (making 22 pried apart plates) provided a foundation for the artist to conceive its visual potential.

Known primarily as being the innovator of photopolymer printmaking, Dan Welden returned to his roots as a fledgling etcher with his ingenious use of a handmade auger as a drypoint tool, and a copper sulfate etch. The combination along with his imagination provided the artistic enhancement with the backdrop of his partner with “Nature”. This highly unique series, entitled “Aesop’s Fables” was conceived through the opposite characters created by the Greek Slave. The abstract images of the Grasshopper and the Ant along with the many other images are being exhibited from October 1-28 at the Ink-Shop Printmaking Center in Ithaca, New York while simultaneously being shown at The New Arts Program in Kutztown, Pennsylvania until December 17th.
Relevant research areas: North America, Contemporary, Etching
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