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The Morgan acquires prints by Martin Puryear

The Morgan acquires prints by Martin Puryear Martin Puryear (b. 1941), Phrygian, 2012, softground etching, drypoint, aquatint, and spitbite aquatint with chine collé. Image: 24 x 18 in.; sheet: 35 x 28 in. © Martin Puryear, Courtesy Matthew Marks Gallery. NEW YORK, NY .-The Morgan Library & Museum announced the acquisition of twenty exceptional prints by Martin Puryear. This group of prints was purchased thanks to a generous gift to the museum in honor of Morgan Trustee Katharine J. Rayner by a member of her family. Made between 2001 and 2014 at Paulson Bott Press (now Paulson Fontaine Press), Berkeley, California, they represent nearly all of the prints Puryear made during the first fifteen years of the twenty-first century and include several of his most important works in this medium. Known primarily as a sculptor, Puryear is celebrated for the elegance and refinement of his largely handmade constructions. The same qualities apply to his prints, which he creates with a simi

Artdaily - The First Art Newspaper on the Net

The First Art Newspaper on the Net   Excavated in 1900 by Paul du Chatellier in a barrow and forgotten for a century, this ornamented slab was recently rediscovered in the Musée d’Archéologie nationale (MAN – Museum of National Archaeology) and was the subject of a significant study that allowed it to be interpreted as the oldest cartographical representation of a known territory in Europe, a probable marker of the political power of a principality of the early Bronze Age. BREST (AFP) .- A Bronze-age slab first uncovered in 1900 in western France is the oldest map in Europe, according to a study released this week. The 4,000-year-old object, known as the Saint-Belec slab, is engraved with markings that represent part of the Black Mountains region of western France, said Yvan Pailler, an archaeologist and one of the authors of the study published in the Bulletin of the French Prehistoric Society. Today, it is the oldest map of a territory in Europe, he said. You can see

Oakland artist Woody De Othello molds his imagination from everyday objects

Shaquille Heath February 22, 2021Updated: February 22, 2021, 8:41 pm Artist Woody De Othello Photo: Smeeta Mahanti Long before the pandemic forced everyone to stay indoors, where many found themselves making friends with lampshades or that old wooden stool, Woody De Othello had made household objects his muse. The Oakland artist has spent about a decade working with clay, creating ceramic vessels that subtly speak his personal truths. Though Othello is known for breathing new life into the ordinary, the metaphor becomes intentional. Ears materialize out of clay so naturally, you might wonder whether they are listening. “Thinking Green” by Woody De Othello. Photo: Jessica Silverman

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