Proof of Concept: Artistic Process in Contemporary Printmaking, Selections from the Museum’s Collection January 9–August 23, 2020

Louise Bourgeois, Untitled [5], from the portfolio Etchings for Homely Girl, A Life, 1992, drypoint on wove paper, state I/I, edition 9/44, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Peter Blum Edition Archive, 1980–1994, Museum purchase funded by the Alice Pratt Brown Museum Fund. © The Easton Foundation / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
General Idea, Nine Lives, from the portfolio Fear Management, 1987, screenprint in colors on wove paper painted brown, edition 19/50, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Peter Blum Edition Archive, 1980–1994, Museum purchase funded by the Alice Pratt Brown Museum Fund. © AA Bronson
Louise Bourgeois, Untitled [Drawing 1], for Untitled [1], from the portfolio Homely Girl, A Life, 1991, blue ballpoint ink on wove paper envelope, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Peter Blum Edition Archive, 1980–1994, gift of Peter Blum/Blumarts, Inc., New York. © The Easton Foundation / Licensed by VAGA at Artists Rights Society (ARS), NY
Anselm Stalder, Untitled [2], from the portfolio Der Umfang des Fassungsvermögens (The Limits of Perception), 1983–84, woodcut in colors on wove paper, edition 21/35, the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, the Peter Blum Edition Archive, 1980–1994, Museum purchase funded by the Alice Pratt Brown Museum Fund. © Anselm Stalder
See how a work of art comes to life. In Proof of Concept, drawings, paintings, and proofs reveal the progress of an artwork prior to the final prints made in etching, drypoint, screenprint, and woodcut. The exhibition title plays on the “proof” in printmaking through selections by Louise Bourgeois, Brice Marden, Anselm Stalder, and the art collective General Idea.
After World War II, as the postwar print renaissance flourished in the United States, countless new print shops were founded across the country, including now-venerable institutions such as Universal Limited Art Editions, Crown Point Press, and Gemini G.E.L. These studios paired master printers with artists—many of whom had never worked in printmaking—to realize innovative and experimental projects. Such efforts continue today as artists further push techniques.
Collaborative printmaking enterprises typically comprise a small team of printers and publishers, engaging with an artist to produce an edition. Often, proof prints and other working materials are also generated as part of the artist’s process. Proof of Concept: Artistic Process in Contemporary Printmaking presents proofs and preparatory works from the Museum’s Peter Blum Edition Archive, 1980–1994, placed alongside their corresponding final prints.
Proof of Concept: Artistic Process in Contemporary Printmaking, Selections from the Museum’s Collection | January 9–August 23, 2020
This exhibition is organized by the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston.