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Spaightwood Galleries

120 Main Street, Upton MA 01568-6193; 800-809-3343

Updated 3-27-2010
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Warrington Colescott (American, b. 1921)

20th-Century Drawings / 20th-Century Drawings 2

Pre 1960s French Drawings: André Barbier / Besnard / Henri-Edmond Cross / André Derain / Leonor Fini
Nataliya Goncharova / Jean-Louis Forain / Mikhail Larionov / Marie Laurencin / Georges Rouault / Vertes

German Expressionist drawings: Hannah Höch / Ernst Ludwig Kirchner / Rudolf Schlichter / Georg Tappert

Contemporary Drawings: Pierre Alechinsky / Joan Gardy Artigas / Jim Bird / Jonna Rae Brinkman / Claude Garache
John Himmelfarb / Wifredo Lam / Manel Llèdos / Lucebert / Nakian / Wayne Taylor / Gerard Titus-Carmel

American Drawings: Isabel Bishop / Aaron Bohrod / Anita Jung / Colescott / Phyllis McGibbon / Joan Root / Simon Sparrow
Colescott on Colescott: "My prints and paintings are narratives, both direct and metaphorical. The intent is moral, if your morality is in my ballpark. The method is satire; comedy is OK, but pretty much anything goes if it fits my drawing concept on paper or copper plate."

Browsing through the over 300 listings for Warrington Colescott on the web, a picture of the breadth of his activities and the respect in which he seems to be universally held becomes clear. According to the Arizona State University Art Museum, "Warrington Colescott is Leo Steppat Chair Professor of Art Emeritus, University of Wisconsin-Madison, where he developed the etching/intaglio courses.  He holds the 'Printmaker Emeritus' award from the Southern Graphics Council and his intaglio prints are represented in most major museums." Randall Berndt, Director of the Wisconsin Academy Gallery, offered a pithy summary of the artist's life and career at the time of a recent show of his work: "Warrington Colescott was born in Oakland, California of parents from New Orleans, and educated at Berkeley. His early family life involved art and culture; the cosmopolitan, outward-looking aspect of his art seems a natural result. The Art Department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison was the lure that brought him to Wisconsin and printmaking, a very portable art, made it possible to stay. Prints have been an influence on the style in his paintings and there is a continual dialogue between the two. Narration is at the core of Colescott's art: the source of its journalistic aspect goes back to a childhood fascination with comic strips and to his college student involvement in political and sports cartoons. Humor is the lubricant that smooths the way for barbs aimed at humanity's foibles and institutions' cruelties. The pompous edifice of culture, politics, and current fashion threatens to totter and fall when Colescott renders it with his quirky and beguiling perspective." Warrington Colescott has received four fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts as well as a Guggenheim Fellowship, and has exhibited internationally. He is professor emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he developed a notable studio in intaglio printmaking and taught for 37 years. Colescott is an Academician of the National Academy of Design, and was named a Fellow of the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences, Arts and Letters in 1988. Colescott is no stranger to national acclaim. Colescott's History of Printmaking series toured nationally in the late 70s and early 1980s and Warrington Colescott: Forty Years of Printmaking, organized by the Elvehjem Museum of Art, circulated nationally in 1988-90. Etched in Acid: Warrington Colescott, a profile of the internationally known Wisconsin artist shown on PBS received a Golden Eagle Award. Colescott's work is included at the the Museum of Modern Art, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, Whitney Museum of American Art, the New York Public Library, and the Brooklyn Museum (NY), the National Gallery of Art, the Library of Congress, and The National Print Collection of the Smithsonian Institution (Washington D.C.), the Minneapolis Art Center and the Walker Art Center (Minneapolis), the Tate Gallery and the Victoria and Albert Museum, London, the Bibliothèque National, Paris, and numerous other museums in the US and abroad.

Selected Bibliography: Warrington Colescott, A History of Printmaking (Madison: Madison Art Center, 1979); Warrington Colescott and Arthur Hove, Progressive Printmakers: Wisconsin Artists And The Print (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1999); Richard Cox and Carlton Overland, Warrington Colescott, forty years of printmaking: a retrospective, 1948-88 (Madison: Elvehjem Museum of Art, 1988); Pat Gilmore, Warrington Colescott (Milwaukee: Milwaukee Art Museum, 1996); Debbie Veil, "Warrington Colescott: Between Tragedy and High Comedy," American Artist, May 1978, 60-65, 102-109 .
Dillinger: The Breakout from the Indiana Pen. Original color viscosity intaglio, 1966. Edition: fifty signed and numbered impressions, of which ours is n. 7/50. Colescott, perhaps the most serious satirist American art has enjoyed, combines marvellous technique with a biting wit. This etching is part of a series on John Dillinger, the gangster-hero of the 1930s, and J. Edgar Hoover, his arch-enemy. In Colescott's view, America wasn't big enough for two folk heroes, and Hoover made sure that he and the F. B. I. were the winners. Image size: 916x570mm (36x22-3/8 inches). Price: $1500.
History of Printmaking: Rembrandt Bankrupt (Small Version). Original color intaglio, 1978. 75 signed & numbered impressions. In the large version of this subject, one of the two collector's in the foreground is whispering to the other, "Prints are a good investment" as Rembrandt's prints lie scattered on the floor and in the background. Besides his own prints, some of which are now more-or-less priceless, Rembrandt also had albums full of prints and drawings by his predecessors. Another impression of this work was purchased by the Smithsonian Institution and is part of the National Print Collection. Image size: 290x380mm. Price: $950.
History of Printmaking: Stanley William Hayter makes an etching. Original color lithograph, 1976. After completing two etchings on this subject for his "History of Printmaking," Colescott executed this lithograph at the Lakeside Studio in an edition of 50 signed and numbered impressions. Ours is an unsigned trial proof on oversize wove paper measuring 505x660mm. Hayter is presented as presiding over a workshop of very busy master printers. Image size: 293x382mm. Price: $450.
History of Printmaking: Goya studies war. Original color intaglio, 1976. 75 signed & numbered impressions. One of the most savage satires in the entire History of Printmaking series. Colescott contrasts Goya's "studies," the outrage of Napoleonic era French officers in Paris (upper left), and the present reduction of art to "collectibles" (lower right). Image size: 556x708mm. Price: SOLD.
History of Printmaking: The last printmaker. Original watercolor, 1977. One of the prepatory sketches for the etching of the same title in Colescott's celebrated "History of Printmaking" series. Image size: 354x280mm. Price: SOLD.

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Spaightwood Galleries is located at 120 Main St. (aka Highway 140) in Upton MA at the corner of Main St. and Maple Ave in a rehabilitated Unitarian Church. For directions and visiting information, please call. We are, of course, always available over the web and by telephone (see above for contact information). Click the following for links to past shows and artists. For a visual tour of the gallery, please click here. For information about Andy Weiner and Sonja Hansard-Weiner, please click here. For a list of special offers currently available, see Specials.

Visiting hours: Saturday and Sunday noon to six and other times by arrangement.
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