Aegean I from "Artists & Writers Protest Against the War in Viet Nam"
Artist: Adja Yunkers (American, 1900-1983)
Publisher: Artists & Writers Protest, Inc., [New York], 1967
Printer: prints: Chiron Press, New York; Irwin Hollander, [s.l.], Steve Poleski, [s.l., Robert Blackburn, [s.l.];
text: Profile Press, New Yo
Author: various
Date: 1967
Dimensions:
Sheet: 25 3/4 × 21 1/8 in. (654 × 536.58mm)
Medium: Lithograph
Text: lithography and letterpress in black with red (typeface: Monotype Perpetua).
Paper: various (prints), and beige Niddegen mouldmade paper (booklet)
.
Classification: Prints
Credit Line: Gift of Molly and Walter Bareiss
Object number: 1984.1222K
Label Text:
From Max Kozloff's project statement: "This is, then, a collective project which is partially an imaginative response to a tragic event of our times, and partially a more indirect acknowledgement of the war's anguish by the placing of works in this special context. No matter how varied their theme or form, these visual and verbal images are meant to testify to their authors' deep alarm over a violence which, as they have shown here, has been impossible for them to ignore. It is to such indignation, social as well as aesthetic, that this art has been dedicated."
Prints: Aritst, title, medium
I. Louise Nevelson, Untitled, silkscreen
II. Charles Hinman, Red Figure, silkscreen
III. George Sugarman, Untitled, silkscreen
IV. Cply, Untitled, silkscreen
V. Irving Petlin, Skin, lithograph
VI. Mark di Suvero, Untitled, lithograph
VII. Jack Sonenberg, Literal Dimensions, silkscreen and collage
VIII. Ad Reinhardt, Untitled, silkscreen
IX. David Weinrib, Untitled, silkscreen
X. Rudolf Baranik, White-Out, etching
XI. Adja Yunkers, Aegean I, lithograph
XII. Paul Burlin, Untitled, silkscreen
XIII. Leon Golub, Killed Youth, lithograph
XIV. Carol Summers, Kill for Peace, silkscreen
XV. Charles Cajori, Untitled, lithograph
XVI. Allan D'Archangelo, Dipped, silkscreen
From Max Kozloff's project statement: "This is, then, a collective project which is partially an imaginative response to a tragic event of our times, and partially a more indirect acknowledgement of the war's anguish by the placing of works in this special context. No matter how varied their theme or form, these visual and verbal images are meant to testify to their authors' deep alarm over a violence which, as they have shown here, has been impossible for them to ignore. It is to such indignation, social as well as aesthetic, that this art has been dedicated."
Prints: Aritst, title, medium
I. Louise Nevelson, Untitled, silkscreen
II. Charles Hinman, Red Figure, silkscreen
III. George Sugarman, Untitled, silkscreen
IV. Cply, Untitled, silkscreen
V. Irving Petlin, Skin, lithograph
VI. Mark di Suvero, Untitled, lithograph
VII. Jack Sonenberg, Literal Dimensions, silkscreen and collage
VIII. Ad Reinhardt, Untitled, silkscreen
IX. David Weinrib, Untitled, silkscreen
X. Rudolf Baranik, White-Out, etching
XI. Adja Yunkers, Aegean I, lithograph
XII. Paul Burlin, Untitled, silkscreen
XIII. Leon Golub, Killed Youth, lithograph
XIV. Carol Summers, Kill for Peace, silkscreen
XV. Charles Cajori, Untitled, lithograph
XVI. Allan D'Archangelo, Dipped, silkscreen
Not on view