Thursday, April 25, 2024

Men Scrutinizing Female Heads - Prints

Rembrandt
Head of an Old Woman
ca. 1631
etching
Morgan Library, New York

Giuseppe Garofalo after Annibale Carracci
Head of a Woman
ca. 1750
etching (for drawing manual)
Philadelphia Museum of Art

Louis-Marin Bonnet after Sébastien Leclerc
Head of a Young Woman turned away
1774
hand-colored stipple engraving
Yale Center for British Art

Edward Scriven
Study of Sculpted Head
(Renaissance Woman)

ca. 1820
aquatint
Princeton University Art Museum

Andrew Geddes
Head of an Old Woman
ca. 1820
etching
Tate Gallery

William Strang
Head of a Woman
ca. 1881
etching
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh

Alphonse Legros
Head of a Young Woman
ca. 1880
etching and drypoint
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Alphonse Legros
Head of a Woman
ca. 1890
etching and drypoint
Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio

John William Waterhouse
Head of a Woman
1896
lithograph
Yale Center for British Art

Jan Toorop
Head of Marguérite Adolphine Helfrich
1897
drypoint
National Gallery of Art, Washington DC

Augustus John
The Woolen Hat
1919
etching
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri

Pablo Picasso
Head of a Woman
1925
lithograph
Yale University Art Gallery

André Derain
Tête de Femme - Rêverie no. 2
1927
lithograph
Nelson-Atkins Museum of Art, Kansas City, Missouri

John Souter
Head of a Canadian Woman
ca. 1930
etching
Yale Center for British Art

Gerald Brockhurst
Head of Anais
1944
lithograph
Scottish National Gallery, Edinburgh

Roy Lichtenstein
Modern Art II
1996
screenprint
Tate Gallery

A Portrait

For Gertrude Buckman

Yes, she craves diminutive things:
The sea shell and the carousel
Obliquely seen through an opera glass,
And the faint colors on the wind that pass;
Not the red of the loud bell
But the shadow echoed in the well.

Yes, she is aware of innuendo:
The splendid underscoring of these things;
A skull is therefore Mexico,
And the hummingbird sings
Loudest.  Not the jay, nor the gull,
But the ultimate infinitesimal. 

Yes, she believes in overtones:
The statues alive at twilight;
Not the word said, but the word unspoken,
Not the gift, but the token.
To her, a pinpoint instant star
Is the history of all incredible light. 

– Howard Moss (1946)