Researcher Mark Tomasko has created a significant exhibition at The Grolier Club in New York City entitled "Images of Value: the Artwork Behind US Security Engraving 1830s-1980s." Here's the press release. Accompanying the exhibit is an extensive illustrated catalog.
-Editor
Images of Value: The Artwork Behind
U.S. Security Engraving 1830s-1980s
at the Grolier Club
The paper money we handle every day depicts familiar portraits of presidents
and statesmen, but how many people know that a woman's portrait was once a standard
likeness on federal currency? Or that a notorious showgirl's portrait was engraved for
bond coupons? Or that a portrait of one of Queen Victoria's daughters was turned into
"Young America" for use on stock certificates? The exhibition Images of Value: The
Artwork Behind U.S. Security Engraving 1830s-1980s, on public view at the Grolier
Club from February 22 to April 29, 2017, presents a rare look behind the images that
appeared on bank notes and securities produced in the United States for over 150 years.
For the first time visitors can see a remarkable range of original wash drawings
and paintings, period photographs and prints used to engrave the images on documents
of value for the United States and countries ranging from Argentina to China to Spain,
along with the documents on which the resulting engravings appeared. The exhibition is
primarily from the holdings of Mark D. Tomasko, a private collector, scholar, and
researcher who documents the engravers, artists, designers, and bank note firms.
Much news has been made in recent months about portraits of women coming to
U.S. federal paper money, but in reality it’s a case of women coming back to federal
paper money. Martha Washington’s portrait was a constant presence on US Silver
Certificates from 1886 to the turn-of-the-century, and possible sources for the image used
are on display along with the Silver Certificates on which she appeared.
Before the Civil War banks were chartered by the states, and most local banks
issued their own bank notes. This created a large demand for quality paper money and
gave rise to a thriving group of bank note engraving firms, effectively making the U.S. the
world leader in security engraving by the late 1850s.
Exquisite miniature drawings by Asher B. Durand, George W. Hatch, Henry
Inman, and Thomas Birch illustrate the era when artwork needed to be drawn in a very
small size to be engraved. Photography later liberated the artwork from the miniature
size (the art could be photo-reduced to the size to be engraved). The result was the
golden age of wash drawings, 1850s-1870s, with marvelous allegorical and genre
drawings by American artists including the outstanding F. O. C. Darley, whose drawings
of the American scene set a high standard. Featured in the exhibition are Darley's
drawings of Union Civil War soldiers, and some of his genre subjects. Other noted artists
shown for this era include James D. Smillie and Walter Shirlaw.
American and European prints of the mid- and late-nineteenth century include
several remarkable mid-century French chromolithographs of female heads, an art
engraving of one of Queen Victoria’s daughters (turned into a security engraving entitled
“Young America”!), a large theater poster, and a large print of Rosa Bonheur’s Horse Fair
(one of the largest paintings in the Metropolitan Museum of Art, at 8’ x 16’). Horse Fair
became an engraving 1 1⁄2” x 3 1⁄2” and was used on documents as diverse as an 1870s
Bolivian bank note and an 1880s New York City street railway bond.
By the twentieth century photographs became more commonly used as the
artwork source for bank note picture engravings. On view are photographs of Chinese
subjects turned into engravings on bank notes for China but produced by American bank
note firms. Other period photos used for engravings include a large panorama of Lower
Manhattan in 1904 and a portrait of Evelyn Nesbit, the “girl in the red velvet swing” who
became a decorative engraving for coupon bonds.
Alonzo E. Foringer, a muralist who had worked for Edwin Blashfield, is a star of
the show, with his large oil paintings of allegorical females produced from the 1910s to
the 1940s. The finest picture engravers created the best allegorical engravings of the
twentieth century from Foringer’s work, a marriage of engraving and art that has never
been equaled. Known today primarily for a World War I Red Cross poster, Foringer’s real
achievement is his bank note art, which graced the stocks and bonds of hundreds of U.S.
companies and at least 50 bank notes of foreign banks and governments.
Robert Lavin followed Foringer and became the second greatest security
engraving artist of the twentieth century, working in the 1960s-1980s. His allegorical
paintings, and paintings of working people (perhaps best described as “Capitalist
Realism”), became the leading picture engravings for stocks and bonds in the later
twentieth century. Some examples of other artists’ work of the 1950s and 1960s are also
shown in the exhibition.
CATALOGUE:
The exhibition Images of Value: the Artwork Behind U.S. Security Engraving 1830s-
1980s, sponsored by the Grolier Club’s Committee on Prints, Drawings, and
Photographs, is accompanied by a full-color catalogue with a preface by William H. Gerdts.
PUBLIC EVENTS:
Free Lunchtime Exhibition Tours led by curator Mark Tomasko: February 22, March 1, 8,
15, 22, and 29, 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm.
Illustrated Talk by the curator followed by a Panel Discussion on the Artwork Behind U.S.
Security Engraving: Tuesday, March 7, 2017, 3:00 pm - 5:00 pm.
ABOUT THE GROLIER CLUB:
Founded in 1884, the Grolier Club of New York is America’s oldest and largest society for
bibliophiles and enthusiasts in the graphic arts. Named for Jean Grolier, the Renaissance
collector renowned for sharing his library with friends, the Grolier Club’s objective is to foster the
study, collecting, and appreciation of books and works on paper.
VISITING THE GROLIER CLUB:
47 E. 60th Street,
New York, NY 10022
212-838-6690
Hours: Monday-Saturday, 10 AM to 5 PM
Admission: Open to the public free of charge
www.grolierclub.org
See an article later in this issue with more information and images about the exhibit. Meanwhile, bibliophiles and researchers should consider adding a copy of the catalog to their libraries. This looks like a quality production incorporating original artwork and of course, the scholarship is top-notch.
-Editor
Mark Tomasko adds:
It's an unusual exhibition, as I don't believe there has been another one like it, showing 150 years of prints, drawings, photographs, and paintings used for security engraving. There are over 250 items in the show, mostly in groups of three, namely (a) the artwork; (b) a die proof of the engraving; and (c) one or more documents of value (bank notes or securities, mostly) on which the engraving was used.
There is a 173 page catalogue, with most everything illustrated, in color, available for purchase at the Club or by mail from Oak Knoll Books, for $40. Every copy has an intaglio print as the frontispiece, of the signature image of the show, "Abundance," a painting by A. E. Foringer done in 1927 for American Bank Note.
IMAGES OF VALUE: THE ARTWORK BEHIND US SECURITY ENGRAVING · 1830s-1980s.
Tomasko, Mark D.
New York, NY: The Grolier Club, 2017.
8.5 x 11 inches
Paperback with flaps
174 pages
ISBN: 9781605830674
Price: $40.00
For more information, or to order, see:
IMAGES OF VALUE: THE ARTWORK BEHIND US SECURITY ENGRAVING · 1830s-1980s. - See more at: https://www.oakknoll.com/pages/books/129450/mark-d-tomasko/images-of-value-the-artwork-behind-us-security-engraving-1830s-1980s#sthash.TZ89Cpmj.dpuf
(www.oakknoll.com/pages/books/129450/mark-d-tomasko/images-of-value-the-artwork-behind-us-security-engraving-1830s-1980s)
Wayne Homren, Editor
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