All This Has Come Upon Us

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Last night, the documentary film, All This Has Come Upon Us had its American premier at the Eldridge Street Synagogue in New York’s Lower East Side. It was the second program produced for Czech television on artist Mark Podwal, focusing on his recent Terezin Ghetto Museum exhibition.

Filmed in Prague, Terezin, Auschwitz, Krakow and at the Eldridge Street Synagogue, the documentary includes interviews, discussion, and insight into the Terezin series as well as Dr. Podwal’s broader career as an artist.

Among the events depicted in the Terezin prints are the Crusader massacre in Mainz, the burning of the Talmud in France, the Inquisition, the 1492 Expulsion from Spain, the Venice Ghetto, the Chmelniecki massacres, the Canonist Law of 1827, the 1899 Blood Libel in Polna, Kristallnacht, Terezin, and Auschwitz, among others. A second screening of All This Has Come Upon Us will be held later in the month at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton.
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Happily, Dr. Podwal’s 42 Terezin prints have been editioned and Princeton University has acquired one of the 60 portfolios. “Given that Jews have long been known as the ‘People of the Book,’” notes the artist’s website, “each artwork resembles a book’s pages. Page after page illuminates the saying that ‘Misfortune seldom misses a Jew.’ Yet, despite all this, Jews sustained their extraordinary faith in God. The tragedies and injustices pictured in these works are paired with biblical verses, all from Psalms.”

20141007_192225_resizedMark Podwal, All This Has Come Upon Us, 2014. Portfolio of 42 archival pigment prints of acrylic, gouache and colored pencil works on paper. One of 60 copies. Coming soon.

See the prints: http://www.markpodwal.com/projects.html

When can you call yourself an artist?

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Susan Crile, a former Princeton University painting instructor, recently set a precedent for all American artists. The New York Times asked today, “If you say you are an artist, but you make little money from selling your art, can your work be considered a profession in the eyes of the Internal Revenue Service?” Thanks to Crile, the answer is now yes.

The ruling was handed down late last week.  “The case involved the New York painter and printmaker Susan Crile, whose politically charged work is in the collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Guggenheim Museum and several other major institutions. In 2010, the I.R.S. accused Ms. Crile of underpaying her taxes, basing the case on the contention that her work as an artist over several decades was, for tax-deduction purposes, not a profession but something she did as part of her job as a professor of studio art at Hunter College.” –Randy Kennedy, “Tax Court Ruling Is Seen as a Victory for Artists,” New York Times October 6, 2014

To read the complete story: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/10/07/arts/design/tax-court-ruling-is-seen-as-a-victory-for-artists.html?module=Search&mabReward=relbias%3Ar

To see the ruling: http://ustaxcourt.gov/InOpHistoric/CrileMemo.Lauber.TCM.WPD.pdf

Crile was an instructor at Princeton University in the visual arts program from 1973 to 1976. Good luck to her!

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Henry Martin, “I’m afraid I must concur with Dr. Hamilton and Dr. Movin. The cause of death was taxes,” 1977. Pen and ink drawing. Graphic Arts Collection GA 2009.00343 (c) New Yorker

Persefόneia

vandorou persefoneia2Maro Vandorou, Persefóneia. Translation by Nadine Fiedler ([Eugene, Ore.: Lone Goose Press, 2012]). Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2014- in process

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vandorou persefoneiaPersefóneia is a limited edition book of original artwork in platinotypes and poems. The conceptual focus is on transformation and the intriguing shift of roles held in balance by Persephone’s archetypes: maiden-wife, queen of the underworld, daughter, and co-initiator to the Eleusinian mysteries. The second part of a trilogy, following Vertical Time, an installation of platinum prints and a film of images and echoes, Persefóneia deepens and completes the study and visual exploration of transformation.

The video component of Persefόneia involves images projected on silk within echoes of the spoken words of poems. The artist writes “The images and poems reference an irrevocable process of transformation. Photographic material from the Oracle of the Dead, an archeological site 500 miles from Athens. Greece. Mythologically, the site is known as the ruling seat of Hades and Persephone of the Underworld.”

See the video filmed at Murdoch Collections Gallery, in Portland, Oregon, U.S.A. http://youtu.be/cZ2rgzsc0cs

 

Costume designs by Peter Rice, Robert LaVine, and others

theater sketches2W. Robert LaVine (died 1981), Design for the Union Soldier’s costume in Maggie Flynn, ca. 1968. Ink and watercolor. Graphic Arts Collection shell ff.

theater sketches1The musical Maggie Flynn opened at the ANTA Playhouse in New York City on October 23, 1968 and ran for a total of 82 performances. It is one of three Broadway musicals with costumes by LaVine. The show’s book, music, and lyrics were written by Hugo Peretti and Luigi Creatore.

Besides designs for Broadway, LaVine also worked in movies, television, and high fashion. Shortly before his death in 1980, he published In a Glamorous Fashion: the Fabulous Years of Hollywood Costume Design (New York: Scribner, 1980). Firestone TT507 .L36

 

theater sketches3Peter Rice (born 1928) designed the costumes for Les deux pigeons (The Two Pigeons) in 1961. This allegorical ballet was based on the fable of Jean de La Fontaine (1621-1695) was first performed at the Paris Opéra in October 1886. Frederick Ashton later created a new ballet to the same music, danced by the South African National Ballet.

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Macbeth, Scene V, Act V “Hang out our banners on the outward walls. / The cry is still “They come!” Our castle’s strength / Will laugh a siege to scorn; here let them lie / Till famine and the ague eat them up: / Were they not forced with those that should be ours, / We might have met them dareful, beard to beard, / And beat them backward home.”

Unfortunately, the bottom of this set design for a production of Macbeth has been cut off, leaving the sketch without the artist identified.

Back to the Grind

norman back to the grindThe Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired this great pen and ink drawing for an early 20th century newspaper cartoon (note: 3 columns wide). But who’s Norman? If anyone has a clue to the illustrator of this drawings, could you let us know? Thanks.

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Eric Avery

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Eric Avery, USA Dishonor and Disrespect (Haitian Interdiction 1981-1994), 1991. Linoleum block print on a seven-color lithograph printed on mold made Okawara paper. 46½ x 34 inches. Edition: 30. Graphic Arts Collection 2014- in process.

We are delighted to have several new prints and artists books in the Graphic Arts Collection by Eric Avery, a Texas physician/artist who moved to New Hope in 2013 after retiring from working as a psychiatrist in a large HIV/AIDS clinic for twenty years. Doctor Avery has made a career incorporating his medical practice with his activist art, delving into such themes as infectious diseases, human rights abuse, and the death penalty, among others. Many of his complex prints appropriate one or more iconic art historical images into contemporary events. Here are a few examples now at Princeton University.

On July 14, 1990, The New York Times reported, “Bahamas Facing More Questions As It Buries 39 Drowned Haitians.” The story continued “Thirty-nine Haitians fleeing their impoverished Caribbean island drowned when their sailboat capsized and sank in choppy seas while being towed by Bahamian authorities, Government officials said. No explanation for what caused the sinking was given.”

Published by the Tamarind Institute, Avery’s complex linocut [above] incorporates the facts of the 1990 tragedy with three separate art historical paintings: Theodore Gericault’s The Raft of the Medusa, 1824; John Singleton Copley’s Watson and the Shark, 1778; and Rembrandt’s Christ in the Storm on the Sea of Galilee, 1633.

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Eric Avery, Johnny Garrett is Dead, 1992. Woodcut on machine made Okawara paper. 36 x 48 inches. Edition: 10. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2014- in process.

This print (and the Haitian Boat print above) were done when Dr. Avery was working as Amnesty international USA volunteer coordinator of AI’s refugee work in the Southern Region of the US. The theme of this woodcut is the execution of Johnny Frank Garrett, who was just 17 years old when he committed the brutal murder that sent him to death row. Amnesty International secretariat Mandy Bath described Garrett as “chronically psychotic then, a victim himself of unspeakable brutality throughout his childhood and formative years.”   http://docart.com/catalog/Garrett.html

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Avery writes “This woodcut depicts the scene outside the Texas Department of Corrections Walls Unit in Huntsville, Texas where Texas executes prisoners. In 1992, I along with about 20 Amnesty International members gathered outside the unit to protest the execution of Johnny Garrett. We are the group on the right side of the print. Under the winter tree, about 80 college students had come to celebrate the execution, to taunt us and to gloat over Johnny’s fate. The students were chanting “Kill the freak who killed the nun.”

 

avery sleep of reasonEric Avery, The Sleep of Reason from Behind, 1986. Linoleum block print on photo silkscreen on handmade mulberry paper. 34 x 25 inches. Edition: 10. Graphic Arts Collection GAX2014- in process. After: Francisco José de Goya y LucientesEl sueño de la razón produce monstruos (The Sleep of Reason Produces Monsters), 1799.

Avery writes, “In 1986, I appropriated Goya’s The Sleep of Reason to make a poster for the 15th ACLU Liberty Gala. I imagined myself standing inside Goya’s print, looking out at events (monsters) in 1986.”

“In the 1980’s I worked with Amnesty International USA on refugee problems in the United States. I am the slumped figure you see from the back in my print, exhausted from struggling with the human rights abuses happening in my world. During this time, many refugees were fleeing to the US from war in Central America. I lived near one of these refugee prisons in South Texas and had firsthand knowledge about effects of US policy had on refugee lives.”

“Many refugees were fleeing for their lives. Some had evidence of having been tortured. The United States Immigration and Naturalization Service was sending these people back to Central America. Amnesty International opposes returning refugees to countries where they face torture or execution. I worked against the INS policy and helped organize a community based refugee legal aid project in Laredo, Texas.”

“This was during the time Ronald Reagan was President. His Attorney General (also head of INS) was Ed Meese. The Border Patrol used night vision goggles, a new tool. The military establishment flourished during the eight years of the Reagan administration. An increasingly conservative Supreme Court supported States rights to ban private homosexual acts.”

“When you look at the print starting in upper right (Ronald Reagan swimming), and look clockwise – under Reagan are White South African Lawn Bowlers, New York Times headlines about Supreme Court banning homosexual acts, abortion protest. At the bottom, in El Salvador, hands are tied together by thumbs. Moving to lower left, an El Salvador military officer. At 9 o’clock is Reagan at his desk, Ed Meese above him (positive and negative images). In upper left is night vision goggles on Border Patrolman, then chemical weapons. In the center of the print is Nancy Reagan and Claudette Colbert playing on the beach.”
For more information: http://docart.com/catalog/sleep_of_reason.htm

avery infectus deseaseEric Avery, Lifecycle of HIV Showing Sites of Actions of Medications, 1997. Linoleum block print on okawara paper. 72 x32½ inches. Edition: 20. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2014- in process.

Dr. Avery writes, “After the Amnesty International human rights work, with my friends beginning to die form AIDS, I returned to medicine. I think it is important to contextualize my art/medicine in my academic medical and medical humanities career a the University of Texas Medical branch Galveston, where I was Clinical Associate Professor of Psychiatry and Member, Institute for the Medical Humanities.”

The Life Cycle of HIV was an art medicine action for 1997 World AIDS Day. The print also appears on the back cover of Pictures That Give Hope, which was printed in large editions and used in a number of US prison systems.

 

avery images of lifeEric Avery, Emerging Infectious Diseases, 2000. Linoleum block print over lithograph on Mulberry Paper. Printer Beauvois Lyons. 44 x 22 inches. Edition: 35. Graphic Arts Collection GAX 2014

Emerging Infectious Diseases shows the vulnerable body infected by multi-drug resistant T.B., HIV, Hepatitis C and the very new United States infection West Nile Encephalitis.The print emerged after the West Nile Virus outbreak in NYC in 1999. This was the first time this virus was detected in the Western Hemisphere.

The image source for this print is a rare French woodcut that accompanied the poem “La Complainte et Epitaph de feu Roy Charles” in Octovien Saint-Gelais (1468-1502), Le vergier d’honneur, nouvellement imprimé à Paris… [Paris, ca. 1500], unfortunately not in the Princeton University Library. “The sick man is attended by a physician, the man receiving spiritual consolation, the corpse being prepared for burial, and the well man, about to leave, receiving a word of advice from a physician in the background.” –Carl Zigrosser, Ars Medica, 1959.
For more information on Eric Avery and his work, visit www.docart.com

Lady Ku Kluxers

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In August 1921, newspapers across the country ran similar headlines announcing “Women are to be admitted to membership in the Ku Klux Klan.” (The Arizona Republican, The Atlanta Constitution, The Indianapolis Star and many others). The following year, various branches began to recognize women’s auxiliary groups, as reported in The Baltimore Sun, “Lady Ku Kluxers Form Newest Klan” (October 9, 1922).

Finally, in 1923 the formal Women of the Ku Klux Klan (WKKK) was established as a branch of the larger organization, with their headquarters in Little Rock, Arkansas. To qualify for membership, one had to be a native-born, white, Protestant woman (most often they were wives or relatives of Klansmen). Young ladies were organized under the title Tri-K for Girls.

The Graphic Arts Collection recently acquired a number of illustrated booklets, manuals, directories, certificates, sheet music, and other print ephemera around the WKKK. The material was collected in the southern United States over a number of years. Here are a few example:

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Here’s a complete list:
Klan ephemera

Kandinsky Pochoir

20140927_221308_resizedThis finished pochoir facsimile of a Wassily Kandinsky painting was created in one day by the members of the Frederic W. Goudy workshop: Pochoir à la Française with Kitty Maryatt and Julie Mellby on Saturday September 27, 2014. Held at the Scripps College Press in lovely Claremont, California, the workshop was followed by a banquet and lecture on the history of pochoir from the Renaissance to the present.
20140927_122717_resized20140927_135755_resizedThanks to Kitty’s the careful preparation, each of the participants spent the morning familiarizing themselves with color separation, a variety of knives, and the cutting of detailed stencils before launching into the Kandinsky.

Fourteen individual colors were identified and analyzed for their relationship with the segments alongside, or in some cases, inside an area.

Each person cut the stencil for one color and mixed the paint to match Kandinsky’s color palette.
20140927_122947_resizedThen, piece by piece the colors were laid down to reconstruct the original Kandinsky. Special pompons or French pochoir brushes were used to paint through the stencils.

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20140927_155118_resizedVarious colors went down quickly, while others took longer to complete.
20140927_162251_resizedIt was a wonderful day for one and all, with a completed edition of 20 pochoir prints. Best of luck to Kitty’s students who will be building a book about silence over the next semester.

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Wassily Kandinsky (1866-1944), Landscape with a Steam Locomotive, 1909. Oil on canvas. © Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum.

 

George Washington, not the best portrait

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This woodcut portrait of George Washington (1732-1799) was published on the cover of Bickerstaff’s 1778 Boston almanack (said to be the second time the block was used). The caption reads “The Glorious Washington and Gate” referring to British-born Horatio Gate (1727-1806) who fought with Washington during the American revolutionary war. Not, perhaps, Washington’s best moment although it turns up again 13 years later on another almanack.

The block was printed by Ezekiel Russell (1743-1796) who worked in Boston, Salem, and from 1777 out of a shop in Danvers, Massachusetts. The subtitle states “being the second year of American Independence and the second after Leap-year, calculated for the meredian of Boston, Lat. 425 25 [degrees] N, containing besides what is necessary in an almanac, a variety of useful and interesting pieces.”

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hamilton 82dOne year earlier, John Hancock made the cover of the almanack, described as “the anatomical man” meaning done from life, not imagined. The portrait was done “by a lady.”

Bickerstaff’s Boston Almanac for the year of our redemption 1777 (Danvers, 1776). Graphic Arts Collection Hamilton 78

Bickerstaff’s Boston Almanack, for the year of our redemption, 1778. Being the second year of American Independence…. (Danvers, Ma.: Printed by E. Russell, [1777]). Graphic Arts Collection Hamilton 82.

Dante and G.G. Macchiavelli

dante macchiavelli4In researching the many editions of Dante’s Divine Comedy illustrated by Gustave Doré (1832-1883), I found a lesser known edition illustrated by Gian Giacomo Macchiavelli (1756-1811).

In 1806, the Italian etcher prepared a series of 39 plates following Dante’s epic poem, which were published that year in a single volume and the following year in a three volume set with text. When Macchiavelli died in 1811, his nephew Filippo Macchiavelli collected the drawings and in 1819, issued an edition of the Divina Commedia with his uncle’s prints. Princeton owns a second edition of Macchiavelli’s Dante from 1826.
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Dante Alighieri (1265-1321), La Divina Commedia; con brevi e chiare note (Bologna: Tipi Gamberini Parmeggiani, 1826). “Della prima e principale allegoria del poema di Dante,” discorso del Conte Giovanni Marchetti. Illustrated by G.G. Macchiavelli. Graphic Arts collection in process
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dante Macchiavelli2and just for fun:

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Two of the Dore editions with curious covers.