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Article Posted: 04/09/2015

Social Surrealism: David Smith’s Women in War

Katherine Alcauskas. "Social Surrealism: David Smith’s Women in War." Yale University Art Gallery Bulletin 2011 (2012): tbd.
Relevant research areas: North America, 20th Century, Etching
Book or Exhibition Catalog Posted: 04/09/2015

Eye on a Century: Modern and Contemporary Art from the Charles B. Benenson Collection at the Yale University Art Gallery

Cathleen Chaffee, Amy Canonico, Robin Jaffee Frank, Jennifer R. Gross, Jennifer Josten, Megan R. Luke, Keely Orgeman, Emily M. Orr, Sarah K. Rich, Maria Taroutina, Elisabeth Thomas, Diane C. Wright, Katherine Alcauskas. Eye on a Century: Modern and Contemporary Art from the Charles B. Benenson Collection at the Yale University Art Gallery. New Haven: Yale University Art Gallery, 2012.
Relevant research areas: 20th Century, Contemporary
External Link
Article Posted: 04/08/2015

Lynd Ward’s Novels in Woodcuts: The Cinematic Subtext

Christina Weyl. "Lynd Ward’s Novels in Woodcuts: The Cinematic Subtext." Athanor 30, no. July (2012): 83-91.
Relevant research areas: North America, 20th Century, Relief printing
Dissertation or MA Thesis Posted: 04/08/2015

Printmaking in Late Imperial Russia

Galina Mardilovich. "Printmaking in Late Imperial Russia." PhD diss., University of Cambridge, 2012.
The thesis identified and explored the paradigm shift in the perception of Russian printmaking from a reproductive to an independent artistic medium.
Relevant research areas: Western Europe, Eastern Europe, 19th Century, 20th Century, Engraving, Etching, Lithography, Relief printing
Book or Exhibition Catalog Posted: 02/21/2020

Altered and Adorned: Using Renaissance Printing in Daily Life

Suzanne Karr Schmidt, Kimberly Nichols. Altered and Adorned: Using Renaissance Printing in Daily Life. New Haven: Art Institute of Chicago and Yale University Press, 2011.
Today Renaissance-era prints are typically preserved behind glass or in solander boxes in museums, but these decorative objects were once a central part of everyday life. Altered and Adorned is a delightful, surprising look at how prints were used: affixed on walls; glued into albums, books, and boxes; annotated; hand-colored; or cut apart.

This handsome volume introduces readers to the experimental world of printmaking in the mid-15th and 16th centuries and the array of objects it inspired, from illustrated books, sewing patterns, and wearable ornaments to printed sundials and anatomical charts. It features many never-before-published treasures from the Art Institute of Chicago's rich permanent collection, along with essays on the ways prints functioned—in some cases as three-dimensional and interactive works—and how their condition communicates their use.
Relevant research areas: Western Europe, Medieval, Renaissance, Baroque, Book arts, Engraving, Etching, Letterpress, Papermaking, Relief printing
External Link
Digital Humanities Posted: 04/17/2017

Brueghel Family: Pieter Bruegel the Elder — The Brueghel Family Database

University of California, Berkeley. Brueghel Family: Pieter Bruegel the Elder — The Brueghel Family Database. Website, 2011.
The purpose of this website is to serve as a place where information about the artist Pieter Bruegel can be gathered, shared, and debated among scholars. It serves as a companion site to janbrueghel.net, and is meant to provide ways of furthering our understanding of how the Brueg(h)el family produced a complex body of interconnected work. The site also serves as a general resource for any visitor who is interested in the artist's works. Visitors are encouraged to explore between the two websites to investigate the relationship between the two Brueg(h)els and their works.

We have gathered and compiled this record of all known works attributed to Pieter Bruegel from various published monographs on the artist. Please note that our site is a work constantly in progress. New material is added frequently. Scholars who would like to contribute their own opinions to our discussion pages, or to use the "My Research" functions that cross both websites, should contact us to obtain a login and password.

Relevant research areas: Western Europe, Baroque
External Link
Book or Exhibition Catalog Posted: 06/03/2015

The Book as Instrument: Stéphane Mallarmé, The Artist’s Book, and the Transformation of Print Culture

Anna Sigridur Arnar. The Book as Instrument: Stéphane Mallarmé, The Artist’s Book, and the Transformation of Print Culture. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2011.
Relevant research areas: 19th Century, 20th Century, Contemporary, Book arts
External Link
Book Chapter Posted: 06/02/2015

Georges Pochet (1843-1901), collectionneur de dessins et d’estampes modernes

Pierre Juhel. "Georges Pochet (1843-1901), collectionneur de dessins et d’estampes modernes." In Les Marques de collections II. Sixièmes Rencontres internationales du Salon du Dessin. Paris; Dijon: Société du Salon du Dessin; L'Echelle de Jacob, 2011.
Relevant research areas: Western Europe, 19th Century, Book arts, Engraving, Etching, Lithography
Book or Exhibition Catalog Posted: 05/19/2015

The Artist’s Touch, The Craftsman’s Hand: Three Centuries of Japanese Prints from the Portland Art Museum

Maribeth Graybill, Donald Jenkins, John T. Carpenter, Lynn Katsumoto, Laurence R. Kominz. The Artist’s Touch, The Craftsman’s Hand: Three Centuries of Japanese Prints from the Portland Art Museum. Portland, Oregon: Portland Art Museum, 2011.
Japanese prints have been integral to the identity of the Portland Art Museum since 1932, when the Museum was given 750 traditional woodblock prints from the collection of Mary Andrews Ladd. Since then, the Museum’s holdings have grown to more than 2,500 works and span from the late seventeenth century to the present day.

'The Artist’s Touch, The Craftsman’s Hand: Three Centuries of Japanese Prints from the Portland Art Museum' is published on the occasion of an exhibition of the same name, held at the Portland Art Museum from October 8, 2011 through January 22, 2012. The first major publication to draw exclusively from this remarkable public resource, 'The Artist’s Touch, The Craftsman’s Hand' presents a selection of more than 250 of the most historically important and visually compelling Japanese prints in the collection. Nearly 100 of these works are extremely rare in North American collections, and almost all of them appear here in an English-language publication for the first time. Noteworthy areas of emphasis include early actor prints, dating back to the first decade of the eighteenth century; works by Suzuki Harunobu, the master associated with the origins of full-color printing in 1765; the deluxe, privately-printed surimono of the early nineteenth century; painterly landscapes of the early twentieth century, including a series that documents the Great Kantô Earthquake of 1923; and contemporary prints, ranging from Op Art and Abstract Expressionism to lyrical evocations of an imagined past.

This volume is a collaboration by five scholars in the field of Japanese art and cultural history. Donald Jenkins, an authority on Japanese prints, has contributed an overview of the works in the exhibition as well as a focused article on Harunobu. Laurence Kominz, a specialist in traditional Japanese drama, writes about prints of kabuki actors and their enthusiastic fans. John T. Carpenter, an expert in Japanese calligraphy, poetry, and prints, elucidated the cultural meanings in still-life surimono. Research Associate Lynn Katsumoto introduces the reader to the donor of the founding collection, Mary Andrews Ladd. The essays are followed by a complete catalogue of the exhibitions 257 works, fully illustrated in color with extended commentary by exhibition curator Maribeth Graybill, The Arlene and Harold Schnitzer Curator of Asian Art, and Lynn Katsumoto. Also included are a chronology, glossary, bibliography, and a Japanese-language list of works. Graybill served as editor for the entire volume.
Relevant research areas: East Asia, 18th Century, 19th Century, 20th Century, Book arts, Etching, Relief printing
External Link
Dissertation or MA Thesis Posted: 05/05/2015

The Art of Wit: American Political Caricatures, 1787-1830

Allison Stagg. "The Art of Wit: American Political Caricatures, 1787-1830." PhD diss., University College London, 2011.
Relevant research areas: North America, Western Europe, 18th Century, 19th Century, Engraving, Etching, Lithography
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