Art With Message

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You might hear some argument over the statement “All good art is political,” the theme of Galerie St. Etienne’s exhibition of the same name (until February 19, 2018) featuring Käthe Kollwitz (1867–1945) and Sue Coe (b. 1951). It is a quotation from author Toni Morrison that reads:

All good art is political! There is none that isn’t. And the ones that try hard not to be political are political by saying, “We love the status quo.” … I’m not interested in art that is not in the world.

With Message

Käthe Kollwitz, Never Again War! 1924. Lithograph with text on dark tan poster paper. 37″ x 27″ (94 x 68.6 cm). Knesebeck 205/IIIb. Daniel Stoll and Sibylle von Heydebrand Collection.

Kollwitz was among the most influential Weimar artists. She spoke humanity to power. She taught me that art had a greater purpose than filling corporate walls with attractions. Coe, with whom I worked as an illustrator, has long kept Kollwitz’s spirit (and that of other such influential graphic commentators) alive. She wields the pen and brush as an orator uses the voice. This exhibition is a good reminder that we are living in dangerous socio-political times. Its is important to appreciate this art for its nourishment and inspiration when freedom is at risk. It couldn’t be said better than this:

Prior to the twentieth century, art’s political grounding was taken for granted. Most European art—religious scenes, portraits and history painting—affirmed the values and legitimacy of the ruling class. As hereditary monarchs came under fire, first in the French Revolution and then in the more widespread but short-lived revolts of 1848, artists gradually lost their aristocratic support base. Painters like David, Ingres and Delacroix embraced the new order, helping shape the myth of modern France as a land of liberty, fraternity and equality. Others assumed a more critical stance. Daumier, whose caricatures at one point landed him in prison, lobbied for greater social justice. Goya, though employed by the Spanish court, created the satirical etching cycle Caprichos and, in response to Napoléon’s aggressive imperialism, the scathing Disasters of War. Egalitarian idealism, coupled with growing social unrest, prompted artists more frequently to depict peasants and workers. Art remained rooted in political realities, but the emphasis shifted.

With Message 1

Sue Coe. Abolition: Meat Free Every Day 2014. Woodcut on Japan paper. Signed and dated, lower right, and inscribed “A/P,” lower left. 17 3/4″ x 15 1/2″ (45.1 x 39.4 cm). From an estimated edition of 100 impressions.

With Message 2

Sue Coe. Holding Cells at Back of Courtroom 1992. Graphite, charcoal and gouache on white Strathmore Bristol board. Initialed and dated, lower left, and titled and inscribed inscribed “He says he earns $140 a week as a messenger and cannot afford $800 bail,” lower center. Red “Night Court” stamp, lower left. 29″ x 23 1/8″ (73.7 x 58.8 cm). Published in The New Yorker.

With Message 3

Sue Coe. Welcome to the City of Gold 1983. Mixed media on canvas. Signed and dated, lower right, and titled, upper right; inscribed, throughout. 70″ x 56″ (177.8 x 142.2 cm).

With Message 4

Sue Coe. Vigilante 1985. Mixed media and collage on canvas. Signed and dated, lower right, and titled, upper margin. 96″ x 120″ (243.8 x 304.8 cm).


PRINT’s 2017 Regional Design Awards Issue is Here!

This year, our brilliant Regional Design Awards judges—Aaron Draplin, Jessica Hische, Pum Lefebure, Ellen Lupton, Eddie Opara and Paula Scher—have pored over, puzzled over, obsessed and stressed over nearly 4,000 entries to bring you this list of their selections for the best American designs of the year. Perhaps with a bit more pressure than in years past. With this issue of Print, we say goodbye to the physical copies of our magazine, and hello to a robust and thriving online community.

As Debbie Millman says in her editor’s note, “In its 77-year history, the magazine evolved from a technical and scholarly journal aimed at the printing trade, to a mainstream magazine providing critical reporting and analysis of all facets of graphic design and visual culture.”

Grab this final copy of Print magazine today and join what Steven Heller describes as “more than a mere magazine, but a community—in a sense, a family—of shared interest that has promoted, critiqued, enlightened and introduced a broad swath of art and craft from which its readers have carved out not only careers but creative lives.”

This is not an end. This is a beginning.

ätheKollwitz