Jean Shin - Works from the Lower East Side Printshop Archives New York Tuesday, April 16, 2024 | Phillips

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  • “These objects go on to have their own life in a second context… so in some ways it could be a critique of our consumer habits, how we live in a world of convenience and disposability.” 
    —Jean Shin

    "Jean Shin works in three dimensions, creating sculptures and installations out of found, often discarded, materials—including clothing, broken umbrellas, empty wine bottles, and used lottery tickets. She collects some items from family, friends, acquaintances, even strangers; others are scavenged from the streets. Sometimes, Shin keeps the objects intact and, other times, she alters them. She arranges hundreds of examples of a single item—creating, for example, vast installations from the cuffs of hundreds of pairs of pants or the circular piece of fabric from dozens of umbrellas. In many ways, Shin’s emphasis on the discarded excess of consumer culture in United States and on the dualities of the individual and the collective, sameness and difference, vulnerability and the resiliency reflect her experience as a Korean-born immigrant.

     

    Shin used a process of separating the seams from the clothing panels for Pressed Coat, working closely with master printer James Miller to create relief prints from three of her own garments, devising a way of inking the fabrics and carefully pressing them into paper. The fabrics produced a variety of textures and degrees of ink saturation; though the printmaking process contrasted with Shin’s usual mode of working with variations on a type of object, the unique impressions created by each article of clothing underscored the aspect of individuality that underlies her work." – Excerpt from Editions ’05 by Lydia Lee 

    “People brought linoleum from abandoned rolls or loosened bits from kitchen floors. We found rolls of paper here and there. A local ink company gave us cans of drying ink. We had a few old rollers. We learned to use sharp knives pointed away from our own hands and fingers and away from other people. We ranged in age from 5 to maybe 70 or more. We worked together and taught one another. Oh we were dangerous! We were PRESS!”
    —Eleanor Magid, Lower East Side Printshop Founder

    Founded in 1968, the Lower East Side Printshop began as an open access art and community center led by Eleanor Magid in the wake of New York City’s two month-long teachers’ strike. Magid, a local parent and printmaker who had studied under Universal Limited Art Editions master printer Robert Blackburn, transcended the typical art education curriculum by showing her daughter’s classmates and neighbors the ropes of printmaking through the creation of books, stories, and illustrations on a press in her home. Once teachers reached a resolution and schools restarted, Magid kept her studio open for collaborative printmaking. The homegrown operation quickly expanded beyond Magid’s space, moving to the East Village, where the operation soon became part of the alternative spaces movement of the 1970s, offering groundbreaking 24-hour studio use nestled in the buzzing artistic and cultural hub of East 4th Street.

     

    Lower East Side Printshop at its old location on East 4th Street, 1980s. Courtesy of Lower East Side Printshop.

    Expanding their space yet again, in 2005 the organization relocated from the East Village to a facility five times larger in Midtown Manhattan, and the DIY spirit that inspired the start of the Printshop continued to prosper. Over its nearly 70-year history, the Printshop has become a premier non-profit New York City printmaking studio and resource that supports contemporary artists of all career stages and artistic backgrounds. Through the Printshop’s residency programs – which have hosted the likes of Derrick Adams, Jeffrey Gibson, LaToya Ruby Frazier, Dread Scott, Kara Walker, James Siena, and Hank Willis Thomas, among others – artist’s receive support through access to facilities, time, stipends, and technical assistance.

     

     

    In 2006, the Printshop was awarded Primary Organization status by the New York State Council on the Arts. This status is reserved for organizations that are, by the quality of their services and their stature, particularly vital to the cultural life of the state. Such designation is a testament to the important work of the Lower East Side Printshop, providing valuable resources that strengthen the artistic community of New York and promote the growth of the printmaking discipline.

     

    Lower East Side Printshop logo, with their ink roller chopmark.

     

Property from the Lower East Side Printshop Archives

60

Pressed Coat

2005
Collagraph in colors, on Rives BFK paper, with full margins.
I. 27 1/4 x 37 in. (69.2 x 94 cm)
S. 29 x 41 3/8 in. (73.7 x 105.1 cm)

Signed, titled, dated and numbered 1/16 in pencil (there was also 1 artist's proof), published by the Lower East Side Printshop, Inc., New York (with their blindstamp), unframed.

Full Cataloguing

Estimate
$1,000 - 2,000 

Contact Specialist

editions@phillips.com
212-940-1220

Works from the Lower East Side Printshop Archives

New York Auction 16 April 2024