A Passion for Prints: Works from the Elesh Collection
In the early 1960s, James Elesh (OC 1964) was a student at Oberlin College, with the renowned art historian Wolfgang Stechow (1896鈥1974) as one of his mentors. Stechow was a scholar of Northern Renaissance and Baroque art and a professor at the College, devoting much of his research to Dutch landscape artists and the graphic works of Albrecht D眉rer. While Elesh was a student, Stechow encouraged him to extensively study various states of Rembrandt鈥檚 prints to develop a connoisseur鈥檚 eye. Through Stechow鈥檚 mentorship, Elesh sharpened his interpretive abilities in the graphic medium and developed a passion for studying and collecting art.
James Elesh has spent nearly 60 years collecting and searching for print impressions of the highest quality from such artists as James Ensor, K盲the Kollwitz, Marc Chagall, Lovis Corinth, and Max Beckmann, among others. This exhibition features 19 prints that Elesh and his wife Pam have generously donated to the Allen Memorial Art Museum over the span of 53 years. Many of these are self-portraits, landscapes, or vivid compositions interpreting the horrors of war and the anguish of human loss. These are accompanied by eight additional prints from the Allen鈥檚 collection by Renaissance, Baroque, and Romantic-era artists who were an integral part of Wolfgang Stechow鈥檚 pedagogy and James Elesh鈥檚 education at Oberlin College, and one work that was a gift to the museum in honor of both Stechow and Elesh. All attest to the importance of close looking and the potential for lifelong learning sparked by a liberal arts education.
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In the early 1960s, James Elesh (OC 1964) was a student at Oberlin College, with the renowned art historian Wolfgang Stechow (1896鈥1974) as one of his mentors. Stechow was a scholar of Northern Renaissance and Baroque art and a professor at the College, devoting much of his research to Dutch landscape artists and the graphic works of Albrecht D眉rer. While Elesh was a student, Stechow encouraged him to extensively study various states of Rembrandt鈥檚 prints to develop a connoisseur鈥檚 eye. Through Stechow鈥檚 mentorship, Elesh sharpened his interpretive abilities in the graphic medium and developed a passion for studying and collecting art.
James Elesh has spent nearly 60 years collecting and searching for print impressions of the highest quality from such artists as James Ensor, K盲the Kollwitz, Marc Chagall, Lovis Corinth, and Max Beckmann, among others. This exhibition features 19 prints that Elesh and his wife Pam have generously donated to the Allen Memorial Art Museum over the span of 53 years. Many of these are self-portraits, landscapes, or vivid compositions interpreting the horrors of war and the anguish of human loss. These are accompanied by eight additional prints from the Allen鈥檚 collection by Renaissance, Baroque, and Romantic-era artists who were an integral part of Wolfgang Stechow鈥檚 pedagogy and James Elesh鈥檚 education at Oberlin College, and one work that was a gift to the museum in honor of both Stechow and Elesh. All attest to the importance of close looking and the potential for lifelong learning sparked by a liberal arts education.