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Her handkerchief swept me along the Rhine

Patrick Caulfield; Frank Kicherer; Advanced Graphics ; Petersburg Press; Waddington Graphics

Artwork Details

Her handkerchief swept me along the Rhine
1973
Patrick Caulfield; Frank Kicherer; Advanced Graphics ; Petersburg Press; Waddington Graphics
screenprint on paper
16 1/8 x 14 1/8 in. (41.0 x 36.0 cm);24 in x 22 1/16 in (61 cm x 56 cm)
Gift of Jack A. and Noreen Rounick
2004/2.80.4

Description

Subject Matter:

Fourth in a series of twenty-two prints, this work is included in a book of poems by the French poet and art critic Jules Laforgue accompanied by screenprints by British Pop artist Patrick Caulfield. Admired by the artist, Laforgue was a nineteenth-century symbolist poet who was one of the inventors of vers libre or "free verse" poetry. This new form of poetic verse relied on the phrase as a unit rather than constraining the poetic verse to set numbers of syllables. Laforgue’s poetry became important for later poets like T.S. Eliot because of its blending of observations of everyday life with poetic associations. In this book, Caulfield used the long-dead poets verses as inspiration for twenty-two scenes, created in colorful screenprint. Of these prints, Caulfield noted that “They are not illustrations but complementary images. There are few visually descriptive lines in Laforgue. The images suggest the things I have imagined the poet seeing when he wrote the poem…”

Physical Description:

This print has a flat, graphic image of a clear wine glass with a napkin folded inside. There is a strong horizon line, two-thirds the way down the print, that recedes off to the right. The glass and napkin are both outlined in thick black lines. While the napkin is colored white, the rest of the print is a dark green, including the glass. 

Usage Rights:

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