Anonymous artist (Tibet, printed in India or Nepal), Scorpion Charm of Padmasambhava, c. 1971. Woodcut, 26 x 19-1/2 inches. Philadelphia Museum of Art. 1972.254-29.

Carmelo González Iglesias, The Pseudo-Republic and the Revolution (detail), 1960. Woodcut printed in black, 51-7/8 x 169 in. UCLA Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts, Hammer Museum. Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Maurice Zeitlin.

The Modern Woodcut Contrasted and Compared

Hammer Museum
10899 Wilshire Blvd
Los Angeles
310-443-7000
Gouge: The Modern Woodcut 1870-Now
November 9, 2008-
February 8, 2009

Gouge: The Modern Woodcut 1870 to Now examines the woodcut in terms of its diverse forms and uses in the modern era. A thematic survey, it invites parallels between the medium in countries as diverse and geographically distant Mexico, France and Korea. Woodblock printing is, in fact, one of the most common artistic practices throughout the world. Although the motivations of each artist and the circumstances in which the woodcuts were made may differ greatly, the visual character of the gouge cuts is a defining thread among the selected works in this exhibition.

In its most basic form, the making of a woodcut requires just a block of wood, a cutting tool known as a gouge, some ink, and a sheet of paper. This ancient practice of printmaking was devised by Buddhist monks for devotional purposes in the eighth century and was refined during the Renaissance, but was succeeded as a fine art medium by intaglio techniques. The coarse line of the woodcut could not compete with the smooth, detailed renditions achieved by etching and engraving. A radical departure in the history of printmaking occurred towards the end of the nineteenth century when the woodcut ceased to emulate these more sophisticated methods and artists began to seek out the very raw quality of the medium that had contributed to its fall from favor two centuries earlier.

Paul Gauguin was one of the first modern artists to incorporate the rugged textures and imperfections of the wood grain into his prints. His work set the stage for a host of artists who experimented with the medium thereafter: this was the beginning of the modern woodcut. It became the vehicle for a new and spontaneous graphic language that evolved throughout the twentieth century and continues to take new directions within the contemporary studio.

The exhibition is divided into four thematic sections. The first section traces the woodcut’s emergence as a modern medium with works by Paul Gauguin, Edvard Munch, Henri Matisse, Pablo Picasso, Wassily Kandinsky, and the German Expressionists. It also features woodcuts by skilled yet little known Indian artists working in Calcutta in the 1870’s. The second section focuses on artists who incorporate the grain of the wood within their compositions, thus making the medium integral to the subjects depicted. Here, Munch’s iconic The Kiss (1897-1902) is displayed among works by Joseph Beuys, Anselm Kiefer, Susan Rothenburg, Terry Winters, and anonymous Mexican and Tibetan artists. The third section examines the use of the woodcut as vehicle for public expression. It includes monumental Cuban revolutionary banners, bold cuts by members of the Mexican graphics collective El Taller de Gráfica Popular such as Elizabeth Catlett and Leopoldo Méndez, Georg Baselitz’s haunting The Eagle (1981), and the powerful yet eerie Stowage by Willie Cole (1997). The final section looks at sacred and devotional imagery in woodcuts. Among the highlights here is the sculptural installation The Ways of Wisdom (2000) by Korean artist Shin Young-ok. Drawing on a tradition of printed prayer books and literary texts that stretches back over centuries, she has woven streams of paper cut from a woodblock-printed book into five separate three-dimensional scrolls. Her reinterpretation of the woodcut medium and the historical inspirations behind it encapsulate the core motivations of the artists in this exhibition.

Curated by Allegra Pesenti, UCLA Grunwald Center for the Graphic Arts, Hammer Museum.

 

Paul Gauguin, Te Atua (The Gods) from Noa Noa, 1893-94. One from a series of ten woodcuts, 8-1/16 x 14 inches (image); 9-3/4 x 14-13/16 inches (sheet). The Museum of Modern Art. Gift of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller.

Anselm Kiefer, Grane, 1980-1993. Woodcut with paint and collage additions, 109-1/16 x 98-1/2 in. The Museum of Modern Art, New York. Purchased with funds given in honor of Riva Castleman by The Committee on Painting and Sculpture, The Associates Fund, Molly and Walter Bareiss, Nelson Blitz, Jr. with Catherine Woodard and Perri and Allison Blitz, Agnes Gund, The Philip and Lynn Straus Foundation, Howard B. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert D. Schimmel, and the Riva Castleman Endowment Fund.

Félix Vallotton, Three Bathers, 1894, Woodcut on beige wove paper, 11-5/16 x 8-5/8", National Gallery of Art, Washington. Gift of Gaillard F. Ravenel and Frances P. Smyth-Ravenel, 2000.

 

Edvard Munch,
Kyss IV, 1897-1902. Woodcut, 18-3/8 x 18-1/4 inches (image); 24 x 23-5/8 inches (sheet). The Museum of Modern Art. Gift of Abby Aldrich Rockefeller.