Untitled (from Drawings) by John Philip Hultberg

Untitled (from Drawings) by John Philip Hultberg

Untitled (from Drawings)

John Philip Hultberg

Title

Untitled (from Drawings)

 
Artist
Year
1948  
Technique
lithograph printed offset 
Image Size
8 x 10" image size 
Signature
pencil signed on support sheet 
Edition Size
100; although probably much lower 
Annotations
 
Reference
 
Paper
ivory wove 
State
pubished 
Publisher
artist and Dixon, Diebenkorn, Lobdell, Stillman and Kuhlman 
Inventory ID
16437 
Price
SOLD
Description
Drawings, a portfolio of 17 lithographs, was created in 1948 by the Bay Area artists Richard Diebenkorn, Frank Lobdell, George Stillman, John Hultberg, Walter Kuhlman and James Budd Dixon. Most of the artists were students at the California School of Fine Arts and exhibited their work at the Seashore Gallery of Modern Art in Sausalito. Drawings was conceived by the group as an effort to stave off the closure of their gallery as there were limited venues for exhibiting nonrepresentational paintings. Lobdell‘s acquaintance with Eric Ledin provided access to his offset lithography press. The artists employed litho crayons to make their drawings on aluminum plates which were then printed offset at Ledin‘s Mill Valley studio. The images were transferred to sheets of cream wove paper and the paper was then adhered to support sheets which were signed by the artists. The lithographs were then secured in a black construction paper folder. The portfolio was issued in an edition of 150 to 200 and the publishing time was eight days. Many portfolios sold at a minimum price, which was enough to purchase a bottle of Tequila for a party but not enough to save their gallery from closure. Over the years, the portfolios were broken up, particularly by the artists who traded away the individual prints. Complete portfolios are quite rare. Drawings holds it place in history as the first Abstract Expressionist portfolio created in the United States. It is in the collections of the British Museum, Metropolitan Museum New York, Oakland Museum, Smithsonian Museum of American Art, Library of Congress and the Worcester Art Museum.