The Carved Line: Block Printmaking in New Mexico
T. C. Cannon, Grandmother Gestating Father and the Washita River Runs Ribbon-Like, 1975, color woodcut on paper, 16 ½ x 12 in. Collection of Roswell Museum and Art Center © 2016 Estate of T.C. Cannon, Reprinted courtesy of the Estate of T.C. Cannon
A beautiful 248-page book, The Carved Line: Block Printmaking in New Mexico by curator Josie Lopez, published by the Museum of New Mexico Press accompanied the exhibit.
An ancient artistic medium with a modern aesthetic, block printmaking in New Mexico has been impacted by the beauty and tensions of New Mexico’s unique cultural landscapes and sacred spaces.
The Carved Line was about printmaking and printmakers in New Mexico over more than a century of innovation. It featured block prints, including new works, by New Mexico’s best-known printmakers and brought to the forefront little-known artists deserving wide recognition and a place in New Mexico’s art historical canon.
A block of wood or linoleum, a gouging tool, ink, and paper are all that is necessary to produce a block print. Yet, the versatile qualities of the medium have captured the imagination of artists throughout the twentieth century and today. Art historian Josie Lopez draws on exhaustive research around the state, and takes a thematic approach toward block printmaking in New Mexico. Lopez considers the importance of place, movement, and culture. Of particular note is the influence of artists from across the United States and abroad that brought to New Mexico new artistic approaches to printmaking, introducing new ideas about art and artistic movements. Undeniably, the beauty and tensions of New Mexico’s unique cultural landscapes and sacred spaces also have had a profound impact on the artists, both local and newcomers to the state, and their works.
“The hand of the carver, expressing the voice of the artist, is inherent in each image,” said Albuquerque Museum’s Curator of Art Andrew Connors, “revealing the choices made with each cut of the knife or gouge of the chisel.”
This exhibition included prints by internationally known New Mexico artists including Gustave Baumann, Willard Clark, Howard Cook, Betty Hahn, T.C. Cannon, Fritz Scholder, Frederick O’Hara, Melanie Yazzie, Adja Yunkers and previously unpublished works by other artists such as Tesuque Pueblo artist Juan Pino, Margaret Herrera Chávez, Tina Fuentes, Yoshiko Shimano, Ruth Connely, Leon Loughridge, and Scott Parker.
The extraordinary range of block prints in The Carved Line demonstrated the medium’s continuing appeal, broad sociopolitical and cultural influences, and wide variety of subjects and forms found in New Mexico.