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Article
Posted: 12/10/2020
Margherita Clavarino.
"Stampe miracolose nell’Emilia-Romagna del 1400-1600: la «Madonna del Sangue»."
Grafica d'arte
XXX, no. 119 (July 2019): 8-14.
Article
Posted: 07/06/2020
Antoine Gallay.
"Le problème de l’invention en gravure. L’émergence d’une théorie de la gravure comme art libéral au sein de l’Académie royale de peinture et de sculpture (1651-1674)."
Dix-septième siècle
287, no. 2 (2020): 277-295.
It is generally acknowledged that the reception of engravers in the French Royal Academy of Painting and Sculpture responded to Colbert’s wish to reproduce and circulate the academicians’ works. However, a more in-depth study of the relationship between the Academy and Parisian engravers provides an alternative viewpoint. This article attempts to show how engravers aspired to join the institution, and how the latter enabled them to produce a theory of engraving inspired by discourses on painting, thus leading them to distinguish between original and reproductive engraving.
Article
Posted: 06/08/2020
Britany Salsbury.
"‘Which Etching Only Can Interpret’: Process and Privacy in Albert Besnard’s La Femme."
Print Quarterly
37, no. 2 (June 2020): 152-165.
Article
Posted: 05/23/2020
Lisa Pon.
"Caraglio and Rosso Fiorentino Between Pen and Press."
Bulletin of the John Rylands Library
96, no. 1 (2020): 44-68.
Article
Posted: 05/03/2020
Paul Coldwell.
"The Making Of Paula Rego’s ‘The Nursery Rhymes’."
IMPACT Printmaking Journal
1, no. 1 (April 2020).
Article
Posted: 04/17/2020
Sara Woodbury.
"Giving a Good Impression: B.J.O. Nordfeldt’s Inscribed Etchings."
Art in Print
7, no. 2 (2017): 19-21.
Gift exchanges are among the most intimate ways that artists participate in print collecting. Personalized with the recipient’s name and other inscriptions, gifted pieces document friendships and professional camaraderie while providing insight into the social complexities of viewership. Three etchings presented by B. J. O. Nordfeldt (1878–1955) to fellow etcher Bertha E. Jaques (1863–1941), now part of the permanent collection of the Roswell Museum and Art Center in New Mexico, form an intriguing example. Embellished with notes and informal drawings, these impressions recall aesthetic trends associated with the Etching Revival while underscoring the often private nature of print consumption.
Article
Posted: 04/17/2020
Sara Woodbury.
"The Artist as Soldier: Howard Cook’s Self-Portrait in a Foxhole."
Arts
9 (March 2020): 37.
In the summer of 1943, Taos artist Howard Cook (1901–1980) traveled to the South Pacific to serve as a correspondent in the U.S. Army’s short-lived War Art Unit. During his assignment, Cook produced hundreds of sketches documenting the daily lives of Allied soldiers working there; yet, one group stands out for its subject matter: the artist himself. Collectively titled Self-Portrait in a Foxhole, these works depict Cook taking shelter during an air raid and, together with his writings, offer an invaluable perspective into his interpretation of war through art. This essay explores Cook’s wartime oeuvre by examining the Self-Portrait group’s depiction of vulnerability. Through an expressionistic use of ink and paint and a compositional emphasis on his passivity, Cook offers a personalized interpretation of combat conditions that underscores his sense of exposure. Although his self-representation initially appears distinct from the more assertive soldiers in his other sketches, when viewed together, they collectively demonstrate Cook’s efforts to record a nuanced impression of the war, reflecting a broader tradition of exploring war’s deleterious effects on soldiers. More broadly, Cook’s oeuvre highlights the significance of the War Art Unit and the potential for more scholarship on this initiative.
Article
Posted: 04/09/2020
Serena Smith.
"Ekphrasis: Inscriptions on Wood and Stone."
IMPACT Printmaking Journal
1, no. 1 (April 2020).
Through the narrative threads of language, Ekphrasis considers an intimate relationship between site and practice. Navigating both the tracks and pathways of local parkland, and the contours of lines drawn on stone, the text dwells on the analogous acts of inscription in which these worlds converge. Moving between the woodland environment and the lithography studio these territories offer sites of speculation in which the transcriptions of language are born. Glimpsed in this process is an interplay between systems and substrates that simultaneously progress these unfolding lines, whilst resisting and constraining the routes they take. Spilling out from the overflow of these events is the excess of ornament.
Written alongside the making of a series of lithographs, closely observed are the places and events that shaped their materialisation. After twelve years the woodland I live next to has become embedded in my work, depicted in the hand coloured images is aging bark gathered from felled and rotting trees. Also visually hinted at are nineteenth century atlases and anatomical illustrations. The work more specifically references Ogham – a Celtic alphabet named after trees. What remains of this early script is preserved on stones and in manuscripts, no longer surviving are inscriptions carved into wood.
Article
Posted: 03/26/2020
Karen L. Bowen.
"Newly Discovered Wierix prints for Plantin’s books of hours."
Quaerendo
24, no. 4 (1994): 275-295.
Article
Posted: 03/26/2020
Karen L. Bowen.
"Wierix and Plantin: A Question of Originals and Copies."
Print Quarterly
14, no. 2 (June 1997): 131-150.