One Day My Son, All This Will Be Yours by Shane Weare

One Day My Son, All This Will Be Yours by Shane Weare

One Day My Son, All This Will Be Yours

Shane Weare

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.
Title

One Day My Son, All This Will Be Yours

 
Artist

Shane Weare

  1936 - PRESENT (biography)
Year
1977  
Technique
etching and aquatint 
Image Size
3 3/16 x 2 1/4" platemark 
Signature
pencil, lower right, in image 
Edition Size
a/p (artist's proof, outside edition of 25) 
Annotations
pencil titled, dated, and editioned 
Reference
 
Paper
cream BFK Rives wove 
State
published 
Publisher
artist 
Inventory ID
24916 
Price
$600.00 
Description

In this small composition Shane Weare creates a vast surreal, apocalyptic landscape, desolate with no apparent living flora or fauna. The foreground hints of ruins, a round object rests on a mesa - a home? Abandoned or inhabited? The title explains it succinctly - "One Day My Son, All This Will Be Yours." Unless you do something about it.

Weare's tiny image is printed on a large sheet of paper, large areas of uninked space allow for the subject to grow, to continue as a desert - or evolve into a vital, living planet again.

Shane Weare was born in Lyndhurst, England, on August 20, 1936. He attended Falmouth College of Art in Cornwall, England and studied printmaking at the Royal College of Art in London where he received a A.R.C.A (Associate of the Royal College of Art) in 1963. He then taught at the central School of Art and Design (London).

In 1962 he traveled across the United States with a group of students. Weare drew his way across America state by state, producing a series of terse prints that were so deeply personal as to be an intimate diary of the nation. He briefly returned home, but, after graduating, found himself in 1963 as a postgraduate student at the University of Iowa, studying printmaking with Mauricio Lasansky.

In the ensuing years Weare married and became a U.S. citizen and taught at the University of California, Santa Barbara. In 1970 he and Sally moved to Northern California where he began to teach at the San Francisco Art Institute and the California College of Arts and Crafts. In 1971, started teaching at Sonoma State University in Cotati, California where he became a professor, teaching art and printmaking, and from which he retired as Professor Emeritus in 2000.

In 2017 Shane and Sally lost their home, all of their work and their personal art collection in the Nuns Fire in Sonoma County, California. As an unfortunate result his work is extremely hard to find.

Another impression of this small etching is in The Brooklyn Museum of Art in NY.Another impression of this small etching is in The Brooklyn Museum of Art in NY.

 

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.