Join APS
  • Join
  • Log in

APS Logo

  • Home
  • About
    • Mission Statement
    • Officers
    • Advisory Board
    • Donors
    • Contact Us
  • Members
  • Resources
    • Print Room Directory
    • Online Resources
    • Share your news
  • News
  • Scholarship
  • Opportunities
  • APS Grants
    • APS Publication Grant
    • APS Collaboration Grant
    • Schulman and Bullard Article Prize
    • APS Travel Grant
    • Early Grants
  • APS Events
    • Distinguished Scholar Lectures
    • Talks & Panels
    • CAA Conference
    • RSA Conference
  • Support APS
  • Create Scholarship Item
  • Manage Scholarship Posts

Would you like to post on APS? Become a member of APS today, or Log in

Search by Keyword

Please select any filter terms below and press the submit button to display results

View by Scholarship Type

Filter By Publication Status

Complete
Forthcoming
Both

Order By Date

Publication Date

Old to New
New to Old

Posted on Website Date

Old to New
New to Old
Article Posted: 01/09/2025

Marcantonio Raimondi’s Matrix for the Massacre of the Innocents (with fir tree)

Lisa Pon. "Marcantonio Raimondi’s Matrix for the Massacre of the Innocents (with fir tree)." Print Quarterly XL (2023): 435-437.
A solicited Note in Print Quarterly
Book or Exhibition Catalog Posted: 08/29/2024

Prints at the Oriental Club

Ian Herbertson. Prints at the Oriental Club. London: Helion & Company, 2023.
A guide to the prints and drawings at the Oriental Club in London. These are mostly Daniells but also Fraser, Havell and Hodges etc. The guide also includes nineteenth century Mughal and RAjput watercolours.
Relevant research areas: South Asia, 18th Century, 19th Century, Engraving, Etching, Lithography
Article Posted: 01/23/2024

La rareté à l’épreuve du multiple: L’introduction des tirages limités dans le commerce de l’estampe (XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles)

Antoine Gallay. "La rareté à l’épreuve du multiple: L’introduction des tirages limités dans le commerce de l’estampe (XVIIe-XVIIIe siècles)." Histoire de l'art (2023): 75-86.
Nowadays, there is no doubt that early modern prints played an instrumental role in the development of European visual culture by allowing for the reproduction and dissemination of a vast number of pictures. This article attempts to show how, in this context, print amateurs developed a certain awareness of rarity and then attributed to the latter a specific value. It then describes the development of early limited print editions intended to produce scarce impressions and give them additional value.
Relevant research areas: Western Europe, Baroque, 18th Century, Engraving, Etching
Article Posted: 12/20/2023

Screenprinting in Postwar Italy: Nuvolo and the Invention of ‘Serotipie’

Katie Larson. "Screenprinting in Postwar Italy: Nuvolo and the Invention of ‘Serotipie’." Print Quarterly XL, no. 3 (September 2023): 302-316.
Relevant research areas: Western Europe, 20th Century, Screenprinting
Article Posted: 11/27/2023

‘Someplace else’? Helen Frankenthaler’s printerly paintings

CORA CHALABY. "‘Someplace else’? Helen Frankenthaler’s printerly paintings." Journal of Contemporary Painting 9, no. 1 (2023): 111-133.
This article examines the role of printmaking in Helen Frankenthaler’s practice. While Frankenthaler
is primarily known for her monumental abstract paintings and invention of her ‘soak-stain’ technique, printmaking formed a vital part of her oeuvre over five-decades. Countering ingrained material hierarchies, I consider how the printerly manifests within Frankenthaler’s studio practice. In a January 1970 lecture at Yale University, Frankenthaler asserted that that there was ‘a lot more room for development’ within painting and the ‘best of it is going someplace’. Taking up Frankenthaler’s proposition, I argue hat her painting developed in the ‘someplace else’ of printmaking. As such, this article moves beyond the narrow confines of a medium specific discourse. Printmaking offers an alternate vantage point – spatially and materially ‘someplace else’ – through which to reconceptualize where and how Frankenthaler extended painting as an aesthetic category, subject and site of artistic production. Focusing on Frankenthaler’s work of the 1960s and 1970s, this article offers an exploration of the parallel reinvention of painting, printmaking and, concomitantly, the studio and workshop during this period.
Relevant research areas: North America, 20th Century, Etching, Lithography
External Link
Article Posted: 11/21/2023

La Fontaine, Goya, Grandville: A Study of Visual and Literary Sources

Paula Fayos-Perez. "La Fontaine, Goya, Grandville: A Study of Visual and Literary Sources." Print Quarterly 40, no. 4 (December 2023): 406-419.
This article argues that the French caricaturist and draughtsman Jean Ignace Isidore Gérard, known as J. J. Grandville (1803–47), used plates from Goya’s Caprichos (1799) as inspiration for his illustrations to Jean de La Fontaine’s Fables and Cent Proverbes (1845), as well as other illustrated books. In turn, it is also noted that La Fontaine’s Fables were the source of some of Goya’s Caprichos and Desastres de la guerra (Disasters of War) prints (1810–14). Examples of Grandville copying Goya, as well as of Goya using images from La Fontaine are here presented.
Relevant research areas: Western Europe, Baroque, 18th Century, 19th Century, Engraving, Etching, Lithography
External Link
Book or Exhibition Catalog Posted: 10/25/2023

The Circulating Lifeblood of Ideas: Leo Steinberg’s Library of Prints

Holly Borham, Peter Parshall. The Circulating Lifeblood of Ideas: Leo Steinberg’s Library of Prints. Austin, Texas: Blanton Musem of Art, 2023.
Beginning in the early 1960s, with only the meager budget of a part-time art history professor, Leo Steinberg (1920–2011) amassed a collection of more than 3,500 prints that spans the medium’s five-hundred-year history in the West. Akin to books on a shelf, Steinberg’s prints formed a visual library that shaped his scholarship in fundamental ways. His collection, incorporating the work of artists both famous and obscure, illuminates his claim that in the era before photography, prints functioned as the “circulating lifeblood of ideas,” disseminating figures, compositions, and styles across boundaries of geography, time, and medium. Through close observation of his own prints, Steinberg developed some of his most innovative arguments about the instructive richness of the copy and the expressive potential of body language, while also challenging reigning orthodoxies about modernism. This lavishly illustrated volume with essays by Holly Borham and Peter Parshall examines the development of Steinberg’s remarkable collection and its role in his scholarship. It also serves as a detailed guide to the collection, now housed at the Blanton Museum of Art, and as an introduction to the history of Western printmaking that it broadly encompasses.
Relevant research areas: North America, Western Europe, Renaissance, Baroque, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, Engraving, Etching, Letterpress, Lithography, Monoprinting, Relief printing, Screenprinting
External Link
Article Posted: 09/29/2023

Doubled Abstraction: Ruth Asawa’s Stamp and Its Afterlife

Isabel Bird. "Doubled Abstraction: Ruth Asawa’s Stamp and Its Afterlife." Art History 46, no. 3 (June 2023): 568-596.
In Ruth Asawa's final year at Black Mountain College, c. 1948–49, she used a rubber stamp borrowed from the laundry room and featuring the college's initials (BMC) to make a body of work. Three years later, a pattern derived from this work was mass-produced and marketed across the US under the name Alphabet – without attribution to Asawa, nor to the school for which the pattern's acronym stood. This essay examines the doubled abstraction of Asawa's stamp (in the sense of both material tool and figurative signature), as the letters that she first abstracted into images were subsequently disassociated from both her name and that of the school itself. By tracing Asawa's eventual reclamation of her authorship from this contextual abstraction, this essay makes a broader case for recognizing artistic practices of self-definition.
Relevant research areas: North America, 20th Century, Relief printing, Screenprinting
External Link
Book or Exhibition Catalog Posted: 04/17/2023

Prints of a New Kind: Political Caricature in the United States, 1789-1828

Allison Stagg. Prints of a New Kind: Political Caricature in the United States, 1789-1828. University Park, PA: Penn State University Press, 2023.
Prints of a New Kind details the political strategies and scandals that inspired the first generation of American caricaturists to share news and opinions with their audiences in shockingly radical ways. Complementing studies on British and European printmaking, this book is a survey and catalogue of all known American political caricatures created in the country’s transformative early years, as the nation sought to define itself in relation to European models of governance and artistry.
Allison Stagg examines printed caricatures that mocked events reported in newspapers and politicians in the United States’ fledgling government, reactions captured in the personal papers of the politicians being satirized, and the lives of the artists who satirized them. Stagg’s work fills a large gap in early American scholarship, one that has escaped thorough art-historical attention because of the rarity of extant images and the lack of understanding of how these images fit into their political context.

Featuring 125 images, many published here for the first time since their original appearance, and a comprehensive appendix that includes a checklist of caricature prints with dates, titles, artists, references, and other essential information, Prints of a New Kind will be welcomed by scholars and students of early American history and art history as well as visual, material, and print culture.
Relevant research areas: North America, Western Europe, 18th Century, 19th Century, Engraving, Etching, Lithography
External Link
Book or Exhibition Catalog Posted: 02/12/2023

You Gotta Meet Mr. Pierce!

Chiquita Mullins Lee, Carmella Van Vleet. You Gotta Meet Mr. Pierce!. New York: Penguin Random House, 2023.
A picture book biography about the barber shop of woodcarver Elijah Pierce, recipient of the highest folk art honor in the United States.

“Creeeeak!” goes the screen door to self-taught artist Elijah Pierce’s barbershop art studio. A young boy walks in for an ordinary haircut and walks out having discovered a lifetime of art.

Mr. Pierce’s wood carvings are in every corner of the small studio. There are animals, scenes from his life, and those detailing the socio-political world around him. It’s this collection of work that will eventually win Elijah the National Heritage Fellowship in 1982 just two years before his death. But the young boy visiting the shop in the 1970s doesn’t know that yet. All he knows is: “You gotta meet Mr. Pierce!”

Based on the true story of Elijah Pierce and his community barber shop in Columbus, Ohio, this picture book includes cleverly collaged museum-sourced photos of his art and informative backmatter about his life. With engaging text by Pierce to the Soul! playwright Chiquita Mullins-Lee and Christopher Award-winning author Carmella Van Vleet, it’s illustrated with striking Japanese woodblock by Jennifer Mack-Watkins. A new addition to vital Black art history!

Relevant research areas: Relief printing
External Link
« Previous 1 2 3 4 5 … 40 Next »
All content c. 2025 Association of Print Scholars