In the Age of the Etching Revival
This exhibition presents highlights from the Asheville Art Museum鈥檚 Collection by artists engaging the intaglio printmaking technique of etching in the late 19th and early 20th century. In the context of the Etching Revival movement, American artists embraced the international revival of the medium led by artist James Abbott McNeill Whistler, an expatriate equally renowned for his work as a painter and printmaker. Five etchings by Whistler in this presentation range in creation date from 1858 to 1879, and demonstrate early moments in Whistler鈥檚 production in etching, including La Vieille aux Loques from Whistler鈥檚 first published set of etchings created in London, Paris, and Germany.
The extent of the Etching Revival movement reached into the 1940s and 1950s and demonstrated shared interests of artists employing the medium in France, England, and the United States. Works from the Collection by American artists depict a range of subjects, featuring both cityscapes and landscapes, some of which embrace the modernity of industrialization while others depict rural environments with a nostalgia and embrace of the legacy of etchers of the Dutch Golden Age. Artists featured in this exhibition offer regional, national, and international perspectives, and include George Charles Aid, Isabel Bishop, Isac Friedlander, Betty Waldo Parish, Joseph Pennell, Ernest David Roth, J. Andre Smith, Elizabeth O鈥橬eill Verner, and more.
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This exhibition presents highlights from the Asheville Art Museum鈥檚 Collection by artists engaging the intaglio printmaking technique of etching in the late 19th and early 20th century. In the context of the Etching Revival movement, American artists embraced the international revival of the medium led by artist James Abbott McNeill Whistler, an expatriate equally renowned for his work as a painter and printmaker. Five etchings by Whistler in this presentation range in creation date from 1858 to 1879, and demonstrate early moments in Whistler鈥檚 production in etching, including La Vieille aux Loques from Whistler鈥檚 first published set of etchings created in London, Paris, and Germany.
The extent of the Etching Revival movement reached into the 1940s and 1950s and demonstrated shared interests of artists employing the medium in France, England, and the United States. Works from the Collection by American artists depict a range of subjects, featuring both cityscapes and landscapes, some of which embrace the modernity of industrialization while others depict rural environments with a nostalgia and embrace of the legacy of etchers of the Dutch Golden Age. Artists featured in this exhibition offer regional, national, and international perspectives, and include George Charles Aid, Isabel Bishop, Isac Friedlander, Betty Waldo Parish, Joseph Pennell, Ernest David Roth, J. Andre Smith, Elizabeth O鈥橬eill Verner, and more.