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Celebrating Print Volume 3 Number 2

 

 

Celebrating Print Volume 3 Number 2 
Now available for pre-order!

(shipping will begin on October 24)

 

 

In our fifth edition of Celebrating Print Magazine, we invite you to travel back in time to post-war Paris with Anna Pravdova to follow Czech sculptor Jan Krizek, a young art brut personality, who happened to be abroad when the Iron Curtain solidified. Luckily, today we can venture behind the former boundary, to 1950s Czechoslovakia, via Jiri Bernard Krticka’s treatise of structural printmaking. The story begins with Vladimir Boudnik’s drive to compound a new art program as “a liberating expression of internal creative strengths of each individual.” This Czech enfant terrible worked intensely to “make an impression of an entire factory”—concurrently with Rauschenberg’s first efforts of entertaining the conceptual field of printmaking. Crossing the border into 1970s Hungary, there burgeoned a resplendent fascination with the use of photography in printmaking, a surprising occurrence for a region where drawing defines the medium’s tradition. Krisztina Uveges discusses a renaissance of industrial and screen printing that developed in the city of Mako during the serendipity of emerging photo-based art trends and shifts in socialist government policies. The possibilities allured artists across many disciplines, bringing printmaking into the spotlight.

The creators’ stances were not necessary political. In some cases, one can note a rather stubborn search for understanding the self in conjunction with greater universal matters through a systematic evaluation of human mechanisms or even connections to a place. Breda Skrjanec explores the works of Slovenian painter Janez Knez and his decades-long preoccupation with the social fabric and industrial landscape of the Central Sava Valley. In a recent project conceived as a “memory-laden paper metropolis,” Tatiana Potts examines remembrance and experience of visited locations, channeling her observations into a physical yet ephemeral visual environment.
 

 

 

Celebrating Print is available at a growing number of art libraries. Ask your library to subscribe to Celebrating Print and enjoy our magazine without spending a dime.
Where can you read Celebrating Print
Cornell University Library
Purdue University
Baltimore Museum of Art
University of Michigan
New York Public Library
California State University, Chico
Cleveland Museum of Art
Rosenthal Library, Queens College, CUNY
Columbus College of Art and Design
 Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York
Art Institute of Chicago
Columbia University
National Gallery of Australia
Library of Congress
Talk to your librarian!


Vydáno: 03.10.2017