Ann Chernow- Picasso Project
Please Note Change in Reception Date
The College is closed on Thursday, February 12th for the celebration of Lincoln's Birthday. The opening reception for this exhibit has been rescheduled for Thursday, February 19th from 12-3pm in the Burt Chernow Galleries. We apologize for any inconvenience that this may cause.
“Ann Chernow- Picasso Project,” an exhibit of prints
by Westport artist Ann Chernow that focuses on the printing techniques
of Pablo Picasso, will be on display at the Housatonic Museum of
Art Thursday, February 12 through Sunday, March 22, 2009.
The exhibit represents the creative collaboration of artist Ann Chernow
and Master Printer James Reed. Together they explored the techniques
used by Picasso, discovering new ways to replace toxic media used in
Picasso's printers' workshop during Picasso's time and incorporating
them into Chernow's original works of art.
“Chernow and Reed have extended Picasso’s original methods,” said
author Herbert Lust. “Going beyond Picasso’s images as
a point of departure, they now have a compatibility with the drama
of his printmaking. Not having detailed information about the methods
and materials used by Picasso and his printers, and given today’s
constraints due to the banning of many formerly used toxic printmaking
materials, Chernow and Reed have created an astonishingly varied
body of work which is both a homage to Picasso and an original
and provocative oeuvre.”
In printmaking, the artist works on a surface of stone, metal,
linoleum, wood, paper or other substance. The finished work of
art reflects both the artist’s creation and the master printer’s
skills in printing the work.
“It is important to understand that copying Picasso was not
the intent of this project,” Chernow says. “All images
are experiments that were attempts to render the appearance of
certain surfaces and attain the drama of certain Picasso prints.”
The project began in 2002, when Chernow and Reed were admiring
an original Picasso lithograph entitled “White Bust on Black.” “This
dramatic black and white lithograph had an extraordinary visual energy,” Chernow
says. “I wanted to produce a similar print using my own subject
matter. It looked deceptively easy to do.” Reed, however, told
her it was much more complicated than it looked. The pair then began
to experiment to determine how Picasso arrived at the print. Their
first attempts did not result in the ‘look’ of the Picasso
work. They then turned to the book Picasso Lithographs by Fernand Mourlot,
which noted some information about the technique used for each image.
Chernow and Reed decided to delve further, producing prints using Chernow's
images that emulate the ‘surface appearance of a varied group
of lithographs and linoleum cuts.
Some of Mourlot’s information was so basic that it did not help
them in how to proceed with a chosen image. Reed discovered through
trial and error how to achieve the emulation of Picasso’s surfaces.
The end result of their research and experiments is the series from
which the images on display at Housatonic have been drawn. Accompanying
each of Chernow’s works will be a copy of the Picasso work
to which it relates, an explanation of why Chernow chose that particular
image, and comments about the printing methods Reed used in making
the print.
The exhibit will be on display from Thursday, February 12 through
Sunday, March 22, 2009, at the Burt Chernow Galleries, named for Chernow's
late husband who was founder of the Housatonic Museum of Art.
Chernow will discuss the project on Feb. 19 at 1:30 p.m. in the
Galleries, located in HCC’s Lafayette Hall, The event is
free and open to the public. For more information, visit http://www.HousatonicMuseum.org
or call 203-332-5052.
The Housatonic Museum of Art is located on the campus of Housatonic
Community College at 900 Lafayette Blvd. in downtown Bridgeport, less
than 150 yards off I-95 and Rte 8 in downtown Bridgeport, one block
from the Arena at Harbor Yard.