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Nadar II: Journal pour rire 1848-51
After Nadar had to cease his own magazine Revue Comique due to new censorship laws under the presidency of Louis Napoléon, he continued to work for Charles Philipon. In his quarterly pictorial review series for Philipon’s newly founded Journal pour rire, he also commented on the increasing severeness of police measures, which only shortly afterwards ended in […]
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Félix Nadar III: Petit Journal Pour Rire 1856
The photographic studio that Nadar ran since 1855 did not prevent him from continuing his press-graphic work. The following year, he supported his friend Charles Philipon in the publication of a smaller offshoot of “Journal pour rire” as a co-editor and chief cartoonist.
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Henry James: Image & Text II
Not translated: Das Feature zu Henry James´ gesammelten Essays zur Illustrationskunst, die 1893 unter dem Titel Picture and Text im Verlag Harper & Brothers in New York erschienen sind, gibt ausschnitthaft und in collagierter Form einige Passagen aus der kommentierten deutschen Erstübersetzung wieder, die jetzt im Piet Meyer Verlag erschienen ist. Das Vorwort stammt von […]
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II Der zeitgenössische Holzstich in Nordamerika. [II Der zeitgenössische Holzstich in Nordamerika. von Sylvester Rosa Koehler, Kunstmuseum Boston 1887
Not translated: Der nachfolgende historische Beitrag von Sylvester Rosa Koehler wurde verfasst für Carl von Lützow´s Monumentalwerk „Der Holzschnitt der Gegenwart in Europa und Nord-Amerika“, Wien 1887. Koehler, geb. 1837 in Leipzig, war lange Zeit Chefkurator für Druckgrafik am Museum of Fine Arts in Boston und einer der wichtigsten amerikanischen Kunstschriftsteller des 19. Jhds. Sein […]
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I Double Indifference: Andy Warhol, the Tile Club and the New School
Not translated: Einleitung: Wie kein anderes Kulturlabel hat sich die Marke Andy Warhol als Inbegriff einer produktiven Symbiose von Kunst und Kommerz, von Gebrauchskunst und Kunstkunst durchgesetzt. Er hatte sich in seiner frühen Pittsburgher Studienjahren vor allem an den Arbeiten seines künstlerischen Idols, des amerikanischen Malers und Fotografen Ben Shahn orientiert. Der gemeinsame polnische Migrationshintergrund […]
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Hubert Herkomer, 1849 – 1914. Exhibitions in Landsberg and Bushey
The exhibition on the occasion of the 100th anniversary of Hubert Herkomer, which runs at present in the City Museum Landsberg in Germany and which subsequently will be at display in Bushey near London, should actually be shown at the Van Gogh Museum in Amsterdam, at the Pinakothek in Munich and at the Tate Britain. […]
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Radical Reproduction Graphics. The Counter-Halftone-Offensive of the Stuttgart School. An interview with the woodengraver Rudolf Rieß
Summary of an interview with the xylographer Rudolf Rieß who was born in Nuremberg in 1935. The interview was conducted on 01/18 and 01/19/2013 during a xylographic workshop of the Stuttgart State Academy of Art and Design in Bodman. Rudolf Rieß is the last practicing xylographer who learnt the craft of xylography as a skilled […]
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A Thomas Nast – Gallery (His career in 38 images)
Thomas Nast (1840-1902) started his career as a “special artist” at the age of fifteen. His pictorial journalism marked the peak of graphic art as far as its influence and popularity in the 19th century is concerned. No artist was ever more successful in regard to the intensity, scope and lastingness of his political impact […]
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“Confound the Line” – Photo-Graphics of the New School of Wood Engraving (Exhibition)
“With the new school nothing is theoretically impossible, and no means are illegitimate.” (Frederick Juengling, 1880) Wood engraving, actually a product of early English Romanticism, experienced its breakthrough with the rise of the illustrated press. Its phenomenal success owed to its hybridity, for it combined the fine mechanical quality of copper engraving with the advantages […]
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Corrupted States of Plutocracy. W.J. Linton´s North America – Cycle.
Lintoniana IX God send the Indian luck! / Success to the buck! / May his scalps be many and quick! / Guard his war, O Lord! through the thick / Of his foes! Give him luck! (W.J. Linton, 1871) In 1866 William James Linton moved to New York because, as he confessed in his autobiography, […]