| During their first century of existence in the fifteenth
century, prints were essentially limited by the size and
shape of single sheets of paper as well as by the size of
a standard press. Yet in the new sixteenth century, a variety
of impulses led to the expansion of printed imagery beyond
these confining boundaries. Ambitions to rival painted images
and to adorn wall surfaces prompted print ensembles to expand,
either horizontally into frieze sequences like carved reliefs,
or in both directions like murals or tapestries. They achieved
these effects by adding coordinated sheets, at first mainly
woodcuts but then increasingly engravings, to build single
images. Guest curated by Larry Silver, Farquhar Professor
of Art History at the University of Pennsylvania, this exhibition
will be shown at the Davis Museum and at two other venues.
Except for an exhibition of giant woodcuts in the 1970s,
this will be the first exhibition in more than 100 years
to explore this genre in printmaking by some of the most
important artists and printmakers of their day.
Register for the Grand Scale Symposium
Thursday, March 20, 2008
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