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Sam Glankoff Prints at Sragow Gallery

Woodcuts/Collage/Monoprints
From the 1940s to the 1960s, Sam Glankoff created nontraditional woodcuts. He had a unique way of dealing with the woodblock surface. The color he used was water based pigment with casein to give depth as well as transparency, often like a painterly wash. Oil based inks are more opaque. He printed on handmade Japanese papers, which creates a more delicate surface.

Many of his prints can be described as collage watercolor woodcuts. Glankoff often affixed a fine piece of cord as a line element, or a piece of canvas as a design element, onto the surface of the block. These he added to his already incised lines on the block.

The prints were unique monoprints. No two prints are alike. Glankoff would change his colors and the way they were applied. He would also vary the amount of pressure in the printing process. These abstract woodcuts came out of the figurative woodcuts he had done in the 1920s as well as book illustrations he had done for publications by Random House, McGraw Hill, and Knopf, among others. His pictorial language became abstract, but was based on the figure.

Public Collections (partial listing): The Arkansas Art Center, Davidson Art Center, Wesleyan University, Detroit Institute of Arts, The Fogg Art Museum, The Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, The Jewish Museum, Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York University, The Skirball Cultural Center, Smith College Museum of Art, The National Portrait Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, The Worcester Museum of Art, and Jane Voorhees Zimmerli Museum.

View more art prints by Sam Glankoff at Sragow Gallery.