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The Delaware Art Museum Presents British Prints,1800 To Present
Written by Morgan Kroll Sunday, 16 May 2010 20:05
WILMINGTON, DE.- The Delaware Art Museum presents The Pastoral Vision—British Prints, 1800 – Present, featuring more than 20 lithographs, etchings, and woodcuts, on view May 15, 2010. This exhibition explores British printmaking from the 19th century to the present, focusing on landscapes by artists such as James McNeil Whistler, Edward Lear, and Rachel Whiteread. Drawn entirely from the Museum’s permanent collection, with many pieces rarely on view, the selection will provide insights into the changing nature of prints and Britain’s pastoral beauty. On view through 15 August, 2010.
At the end of the 18th century, British land was
celebrated for its agricultural production. Thomas Bewick and others
recorded
the flora and fauna that fostered this natural wealth. In the early
1800s, the
followers of the Romantic poet and artist William Blake construed
instead the
biblical associations of the landscape—the “constant realization of
Heaven on
earth,” as Edward Calvert’s work was described.
By the mid-19th century, the Industrial Revolution produced new urban centers, drastically changing the relationship between people and the countryside. James McNeill Whistler, Seymour Haden, and others documented this new interaction. Today, the ravages of urban growth are aggressively documented by contemporary artists such as Rachel Whiteread in her Demolition series.
This span of time also reveals fluctuating attitudes and trends in printmaking, as it witnesses two etching revivals. In the mid-19th century, etching plates were popular because images could be captured “on the spot.” Then, in the aftermath of World War I, etching was again the chosen medium in an attempt to revive an earlier, less complicated time, as artists nostalgically returned to the idea of pastoral life.
This exhibition is designed to highlight the wealth—as well as a few of the gaps, waiting to be filled—of the Museum’s holdings in the history of the British printmaking.
Visit The Delaware Art Museum at: http://www.delart.org/
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