Fresh Prints: The Nineties to Now at the Cleveland Museum of Art

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“Contemporary printmaking is extremely diverse,” stated Jane Glaubinger, curator of prints. “Some artists reinterpret traditional printmaking techniques, while others experiment with new technologies or print on unusual materials. The large size of paper and presses allow prints to rival the scale of paintings that dominate the field of vision.”While some artists look inward to personal issues for inspiration, others look at the larger world. Fresh Prints: The Nineties to Now offers a glimpse of the multitude of prints produced in the last two and a half decades that depict images of many themes including: political and social upheaval, feminism, ecology and AIDS. None of these prints have previously been exhibited at the museum. Artists featured in this exhibition utilize a variety of printmaking techniques such as: lithography, etching, engraving, linoleum cut, drypoint, screenprint and woodcut to express their artistic vision. Whether by well- known artists or newcomers, these prints offer visual stimulation and provocative ideas.

The last twenty-five years have been filled with political and social turmoil and strife while computer technology and rapid communication networks promote a more global perspective. One of the prints featured in this exhibition, Annette Lemieux’s Stolen Faces, acknowledges the incessant hostilities and the ubiquity of the photograph in our experience of the modern world. This largescale lithograph, measuring 32-by-90 inches, presents the pixelated faces of anonymous soldiers so that they resemble people on television news shows who wish to hide their identities. A war photograph is represented on the right panel as the image would be seen on a black-and-white television while on the left is its color television counterpart. The central panel of the triptych, an image that has three panels placed next to each other, further dramatizes the anonymity of war with an image of only the pixelated heads of soldiers, disembodied, as if vaporized by the technologies of war, photography and electronic mass media.

Suit Shopping: An Engraved Narrative, 2000-2002. Andrew Raftery (American, b. 1962). Engraving; 37.8 x 52.8 cm. Gift of friends in memory of Ann Bassett and Tom Johnson 2003.15. © Courtesy of the Artist and Mary Ryan Gallery, New York, NY.

Suit Shopping: An Engraved Narrative, 2000-2002. Andrew Raftery (American, b. 1962). Engraving; 37.8 x 52.8 cm. Gift of friends in memory of Ann Bassett and Tom Johnson 2003.15. © Courtesy of the Artist and Mary Ryan Gallery, New York, NY.

Born, 2002. Kiki Smith (American, b. 1954). Color lithograph; 172.9 x 142.5 cm. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro 2004.34.

Born, 2002. Kiki Smith (American, b. 1954). Color lithograph; 172.9 x 142.5 cm. The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of Agnes Gund and Daniel Shapiro 2004.34.

 

Fresh Prints: The Nineties to Now Cleveland Museum of Art
Fresh Prints: The Nineties to Now Cleveland Museum of Art
Fresh Prints: The Nineties to Now
Sun, 03/22/2015 to Sun, 07/26/2015
The Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation Exhibition Gallery
A selection of prints from the past 25 years, this exhibition showcases the printmaking techniques of a variety of contemporary artists. While some, including Julia Wachtel and Annette Lemieux, use printmaking to comment on contemporary political events, others, such as Lesley Dill and Louise Bourgeois, use the medium to express personal, feminist concerns. Traditional landscape themes interest Ellsworth Kelly and Rosemarie Trockel while Lucian Freud and Chuck Close prefer figurative subjects. Abstraction also remains important, exemplified by such artists as Terry Winters, Richard Serra, and Julie Mehretu.

Fresh Prints: The Nineties to Now
Sun, 03/22/2015 to Sun, 07/26/2015
The Kelvin and Eleanor Smith Foundation Exhibition Gallery
Cleveland Museum of Art

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