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Art for All: Innovations in 20th-century Printmaking

October 17, 2024–June 28, 2025

View of a wall in an exhibition with works in a salon style hang. There is a display table in front of the wall with ceramics and two-dimensional works in it as well.

Installation view of Art for All: Innovations in 20th-century Printmaking.

View of an exhibition with many works on the wall in a salon style hang. There are sculptures on pedestals as well.

Installation view of Art for All: Innovations in 20th-century Printmaking.

View of an exhibition with many artworks displayed in a salon style hang. There are sculptures on pedestals as well around the room.

Installation view of Art for All: Innovations in 20th-century Printmaking.

View of a wall in an exhibition with five works by different artists in a salon style hang.

Installation view of Art for All: Innovations in 20th-century Printmaking.

Installation view of an exhibition with many works in a salon style hang. There are sculptures on pedestals around the room as well.

Installation view of Art for All: Innovations in 20th-century Printmaking.

Press Release

The Federal Arts Project’s various programs and post-WWII economic growth created a new democratization of art, allowing a larger number of people to collect affordable art for their homes. During the mid-20th century, companies like Associated American Artists, Alva Studios, and Robinson Galleries, as well as many printmaking studios, were established with the goal of disseminating multiples to a wider audience. Print studios also offered a highly collaborative environment for artists and printers that led to innovations in materials and methods, fueling creative expression. 

 

Renee and Chaim Gross collected hundreds of prints, many of which are shown for the first time in this exhibition. From Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec’s 1895 lithograph made during the Parisian Belle Époque to a 1995 silkscreen by New York artist Gladys Burrows, the exhibition references seismic shifts in social structures, politics, and economies over the span of a century.
 

Curated by Sasha Davis, Executive Director, and Brittany Cassandra, Director of Collections

 

This exhibition is supported by New York State Council on the Arts and the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs.