Showing posts with label Aquatints. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aquatints. Show all posts

02/06/25

Richard Diebenkorn: Prints from Two Decades @ Crown Point Press Gallery, San Francisco

Richard Diebenkorn 
Prints from Two Decades
Crown Point Press, San Francisco
Through June 30, 2025

Richard Diebenkorn
RICHARD DIEBENKORN
Spade Drypoint, 1982
© Richard Diebenkorn Foundation
Coutesy of Crown Point Press

I’m making my drawing in spite of the metal. I think I’m going to make a straight line, and it says, ‘Oh, no you don’t!—Richard Diebenkorn, 1962
Crown Point Press presents Richard Diebenkorn: Prints from Two Decades, a radiant exhibition of prints made by the artist during a series of residencies at the Press between 1980 and 1990. Organized with the Richard Diebenkorn Foundation and Crown Point Executive Director, Valerie Wade, the show takes place on the occasion of the highly anticipated release of Richard Diebenkorn: The Catalogue Raisonné of Prints (Yale University Press, 2025), which includes new scholarly essays, more than 850 significantly scaled images, and a richly illustrated chronology of Diebenkorn’s printmaking years. The works on view in the Crown Point Gallery were created in the final decade and a half of the artist’s life, the “high point” in his printmaking oeuvre, writes Starr Figura, Curator in the Department of Drawings and Prints at the Museum of Modern Art. In her essay Richard Diebenkorn, Printmaker, she adds that the objects made during this period “rank among the most extraordinarily luminous and elegantly structured prints ever produced.”

Richard Diebenkorn (1922–1993) was highly accomplished in printmaking and worked with professional print shops over a period of more than 30 years (1962–1992). Master Printer Kathan Brown at Crown Point Press published a selection of his earliest intaglio prints in 1965 as 41 Etchings Drypoints. “It was Crown Point Press in San Francisco and the intaglio print processes it offered that captivated him the most: etching, drypoint, aquatint, and related techniques for incising an image into a metal printing plate,” Starr Figura adds, which “provided endless horizons for his work.”

In 1980, the artist began his Clubs and Spades series of works on paper containing symbols and heraldic imagery that had fascinated him since he was a young person; the iconography appeared in his prints as early as 1963. A series of intaglio prints made at the Press in which he deployed clubs, spades, and crosses in the early 1980s is “the first occasion,” Starr Figura writes, “when Diebenkorn’s prints start to rival the saturated color, imposing presence, and painterly ambition of his paintings on paper.” Spade Drypoint (1982) evinces his love of the drypoint process with its aggressive lines, while a shimmering aquatint with scraping made the same year, Green Tree Spade, is remarkable for its vividness and texture.

Ne Comprends Pas and Oui, both from 1990, were made during one of his most productive residencies at the Press. Oui, with its floating, broken detritus, marked a return to reversal techniques, which he had experimented with nearly a decade prior in 1981. Emily York, in Magical Secrets about Aquatint: Spit Bite, Sugar Lift and Other Etched Tones Step-by-Step (Crown Point Press, 2008), recalls that Renée Bott made an aquatint reversal of Ne Comprends Pas, which became Oui. “Diebenkorn mainly drew with asphaltum to make Ne Comprends Pas, a predominantly black image in which the drawn forms come through as the white of the paper. After finishing the print, he wondered what it would look like if the lines were dark on light,” writes Emily York.

The very experimental, geometric Passage I and Passage II were made during the same time as Ne Comprends Pas and Oui and were also created with the reversal process. Richard Diebenkorn added a strip of color to Passage I, as he did with his most celebrated print, Green, published in 1986 by the Press. “It wasn’t the first time that Dick had done that,” and “not a lot of artists that I’ve worked with have done that,” says Renée Bott, from a wide-ranging interview conducted by Karin Breuer, Curator in Charge of the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts, Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco and featured in the volumes. “He kept looking at it and…it wasn’t complete to him without adding something.”

The exhibition culminates in the weightless 1990 etchings Domino I and Domino II which are, observes Starr Figura, “among the most richly textured and densely composed images that Diebenkorn had ever produced.” As Diebenkorn’s “Ocean Park geometries seem on the brink of dissolving…there is the sense of familiar forms and structures being opened up, loosened, and softened.”

Special Film
A new and special film with the late Kathan Brown and Valerie Wade, and together with Andrea Liguori, Executive Director of the Richard Diebenkorn Foundation and Editor, Richard Diebenkorn: The Catalogue Raisonné of Prints, explores the artist’s history with the Press and the “golden era”of printmaking during the 1980s. Andrea Liguori, in a tender interview conducted with Kathan Brown in late 2023, unearths brightly hued paper scraps discovered during filming that the artist had used to construct an iconic print image. The film was produced at Crown Point Press by Matthew Pendergast and is now available on crownpoint.com and diebenkorn.org.

CROWN POINT GALLERY
20 Hawthorne Street, San Francisco, CA 94105

RICHARD DIEBENKORN: PRINTS FROM TWO DECADES
CROWN POINT PRESS, May 23 – June 30, 2025

18/12/23

Jacob Samuel and Contemporary Etching @ MoMA, New York - "New Ground: Jacob Samuel and Contemporary Etching" Exhibition

New Ground: Jacob Samuel 
and Contemporary Etching 
MoMA, New York
October 29, 2023 – March 16, 2024

Barry McGee
Barry McGee 
Untitled from Drypoint on Acid, 2006 
Etching and aquatint with chine collé and 
collage addition from a portfolio of seven drypoints 
with chine collé (three with collage additions), 
one drypoint and aquatint with chine collé and collage additions, 
one etching with chine collé and spraypaint additions, 
and one etching and aquatint with chine collé 
and collaged screenprint additions. 
Composition and sheet: 7 13/16 x 6 3/8″ (19.8 x 16.2 cm). 
Ann and Lee Fensterstock Fund 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York 
© 2022 Barry McGee

Wangechi Mutu
Wangechi Mutu  
Untitled from Eve, 2006. 
Etching and aquatint with collage additions 
from a portfolio of five etchings 
(two with aquatint and collage additions, 
one with collage additions) and three aquatints 
(two with collage additions) 
Composition (irreg): 8 9/16 x 5 1/2″ (21.7 x 14 cm); 
sheet: 10 7/16 x 7 7/8″ (26.5 x 20 cm). 
Linda Barth Goldstein Fund 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York 
© 2022 Wangechi Mutu

Jannis Kounellis
Jannis Kounellis 
Untitled from 1999, 1999 
One from a portfolio of twelve etching, drypoint, 
and aquatints with chiné colle (one with blind embossing) 
Plate: 5 5/16 × 7 5/8″ (13.5 × 19.4 cm); 
sheet: 13 3/4 × 15 1/8″ (35 × 38.4 cm) 
Acquired through the generosity of John Baldessari, 
Catie and Donald Marron, and Mary M. and Sash A. Spencer 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York. 
© 2022 Jannis Kounellis

The Museum of Modern Art presents New Ground: Jacob Samuel and Contemporary Etching, a focused exhibition on the work of master printer and publisher Jacob Samuel (American, b. 1951). The exhibition highlights Jacob Samuel’s championing of the foundational printing technique of etching, his innovative approach to collaborating with contemporary artists, and works that push the limits of the medium. MoMA began acquiring works published by Jacob Samuel in 1988 and, three decades later, it holds his entire catalogue of more than 60 projects. New Ground selectively draws from this expansive body of work by a diverse range of artists, including Mona Hatoum, Rebecca Horn, Jannis Kounellis, Wangechi Mutu, Barry McGee, and Christopher Wool.

Over the course of four decades, Jacob Samuel collaborated with more than 60 artists, traveling extensively to do so. Through a traditional but maximally flexible approach, he was driven to prove that etching could be a successful contemporary medium. The exhibition will draw from a range of these collaborative projects. For example, Jacob Samuel made it possible for the artist Rebecca Horn to avoid working in reverse, generally considered a requirement in printmaking, by printing her delicate webs of red lines on custom-made transparent paper, which was ultimately inverted. Moreover, his design and use of a portable aquatint box allowed him to travel to artists’ studios, which allowed Jannis Kounellis to use sculptural processes, not easily transferred to a printshop setting, on copper etching plates. But this belief in traditional processes did not prevent him from embracing other techniques in order to achieve an artist’s vision. Works by Wangechi Mutu and Barry McGee include elements of collage, and are trimmed to the image size, without the expected borders of a printed image. Successive projects with Christopher Wool over the course of over twenty years are particular evidence of a generative partnership. New Ground highlights Jacob Samuel’s breadth of knowledge, historical expertise, and unwavering commitment, which made him an ideal partner for artists new to the medium.

Mona Hatoum
Mona Hatoum 
Untitled from hair there and every where, 2004 
One from a portfolio of ten etchings with chine collé. 
Plate: 7 7/8 x 6 7/8″ (20 x 17.5 cm); 
sheet: 16 x 14″ (40.6 x 35.6 cm). 
Carol and Morton H. Rapp Fund 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York 
© 2022 Mona Hatoum

Charline von Heyl
Charline von Heyl 
Untitled from Black Sun: 
The Brief Transit and Violent Eclipse of Harry Crosby, 2013 
One from a portfolio of eight etchings with drypoint, roulette, 
aquatint, and chine collé. Plate: 7 13/16 × 6 7/8″ (19.9 × 17.4 cm); 
sheet: 16 15/16 × 15″ (43 × 38.1 cm). 
Acquired through the generosity of John Baldessari, 
Catie and Donald Marron, and Mary M. and Sash A. Spencer. 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York. 
© 2022 Charline von Heyl

Jonas Wood
Jonas Wood 
Untitled from 8 Etchings, 2014 
One from a portfolio of eight etchings with chine collé. 
Plate: 8 3/4 × 7 13/16″ (22.3 × 19.9 cm); 
sheet: 15 15/16 × 13 15/16″ (40.5 × 35.4 cm). 
Acquired through the generosity of John Baldessari, 
Catie and Donald Marron, and Mary M. and Sash A. Spencer. 
The Museum of Modern Art, New York. 
© 2022 Jonas Wood

Jacob Damuel - MoMA
Installation view of New Ground: Jacob Samuel 
and Contemporary Etching, on view at 
The Museum of Modern Art from October 29, 2023, 
through March 16, 2024. 
Photo: Jonathan Dorado

Born and raised in Santa Monica, California, JACOB SAMUEL began his career as a master printer for the Abstract Expressionist painter Sam Francis. Having worked extensively on Francis’s monumental, multicolour aquatints for eighteen years, Jacob Samuel was drawn instead to publish a very different type of work under his own name: small scale, serial, and generally printed in a single tone. A continually expanding network of friends and creators made introductions, and Jacob Samuel began to work with some of the most influential artists of the 20th and 21st century. He collaborated with painters, sculptors, performance artists, and musicians to make etchings that reflected their overall artistic practices. Despite the diverse range of artists, certain common themes arise with consideration of Jacob Samuel’s imprint as a whole: the depiction or impression of the body on a printing matrix, for example, or a system of images that unfolds across multiple sheets of paper. Many of the projects include texts written by the artists, a further invitation to close looking. As with everything published by Jacob Samuel, each project has a custom-designed housing that expands the work’s presence into three dimensions. The breadth, variety, and, above all, creativity in the works he published with an exceptional list of artists is evidence of his success in bringing the tradition of old master printmaking to contemporary artistic practices.

The exhibition is accompanied by the first publication dedicated to the work of the master printer Jacob Samuel. The richly illustrated catalogue features an essay by curator Esther Adler, interviews with a dozen of the artists Jacob Samuel has worked with, and a highly researched checklist detailing every project published by Jacob Samuel.

New Ground: Jacob Samuel and Contemporary Etching is organized by Esther Adler, Curator, and Margarita Lizcano Hernandez, Curatorial Assistant, Department of Drawings and Prints.

MoMA - MUSEUM OF MODERN ART
11 West 53 Street, New York, NY 10019