African American Abstract Expressionist Etching Aquatint "Anatomy of Aphrodite" by Warrington Colescott, 1959
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An important abstract expressionist color aquatint etching by the celebrated African American artist (1921-2018), titled "An Anatomy of Aphrodite", signed & dated 1959.
Colescott was an important painter & master print-maker, he was the older brother of the artist Robert Colescott (1925-2009), this rather beautiful image depicts an abstract female form, with hints of color and surrounded with various areas of cross-hatching.
The work is titled to the lower left, to the center is is numbered "1/10" and signed lower right "Warrington Colescott 1959", the etching is housed in archival acid free materials. This is a very rare image & possibly the only existing one from the ten that were produced. Condition is excellent.
At sight without mount 24.50" x 19"
Biography
Warrington Colescott, painter, print-maker, & educator, he was born in Oakland, California on March 7, 1921. His parents, Warrington, Sr. and Lydia Colescott, were New Orleans Creoles who moved to Oakland in 1920. Colescott received his B.A. from the University of California, Berkeley in 1942 but further studies were interrupted when he was drafted into the United States Army during the Second World War. Upon his discharge, he returned to the University of California where he earned his M.A. in 1947. Warrington's brother was the artist Robert Colescott (1925-2009).
His teaching career began the same year when he accepted an instructor position at the Long Beach City College in Long Beach, California. Colescott made his first print, a serigraph, while at Long Beach and he taught there for two years before moving to Wisconsin in 1949. That year he began his long and illustrious teaching career at the University of Wisconsin at Madison. He was named Associate Professor in 1955, Professor in 1958, and Professor Emeritus in 1986.In 1953, Colescott attended l’Académie de la Grande Chaumière in Paris. He received a Fulbright Fellowship in 1957 that allowed him a year of study the Slade School of Art in London and, while there, he worked under the instruction of Anthony Gross and learned the spectrum of intaglio processes. Colescott received a Guggenheim Fellowship in 1965, a National Endowment for the Art Printmaking Fellowship in 1975, and National Endowment for the Arts Artist Fellowships in 1979 and 1983. Collescott’s early graphics were abstractions created in the medium of serigraph. By the early 1960s he had turned his focus on intaglio printmaking and his imagery evolved into social satire and commentary. He produced a number of narrative satires, including one on the history of printmaking.
Warrington Colescott has an extensive exhibition history and his work is included in numerous public collections including the Victoria and Albert Museum and the Tate Gallery of Modern Art, London; the Bibliothėque nationale de France, Paris; the Metropolitan Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York; the Brooklyn Museum; the Art Institute of Chicago; the Cincinnati Art Museum; the Los Angeles County Museum of Art; the Chazen Museum of Art and the Madison Museum of Contemporary Art, Madison; the Milwaukee Art Museum; the Carnegie-Mellon Museum, Pittsburgh; the Portland Art Museum, Oregon; the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; and the Smithsonian American Art Museum.
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