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

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  • “When I moved to New York, [my] characters became dense and claustrophobic, and I started trying to put order to the chaos. To do this, I put them in dance poses.” 
    —Marcel Dzama

    Dzama’s Ya es Hora, published to celebrate the 60th anniversary of Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, portrays an exuberant and joyful display of figures dancing and swirling, in hues of cobalt, symbolizing a female-led revolution. The characters are inspired by Dzama’s collaboration with choreographer, Justin Peck for The New York City Ballet's 2016 performance, The Most Incredible Thing. Dzama, whose whimsical compositions often involve dancer-like characters, drew inspiration for the ballet from French avant-garde artist Francis Picabia and the polka-dotted costumes he designed for his 1924 Swedish production of Relâche; in turn, the title Ya es Hora pays homage to the final plate of the socially and politically themed etchings Los Caprichos by Spanish master engraver Francisco Goya. Reflecting a myriad of influences, Ya es Hora beautifully illustrates Dzama’s continued art historical quotation, reinventing these canonical markers to visualize dream-like worlds and the characters who inhabit them. 

     

    [Left] Francis Picabia, Study for Relâche, Jean Börlin, 1924, Dansmuseet – Museum Rolf de Maré Stockholm
    [Right] Francisco de Goya,Ya es hora (It Is Time), plate 80 from Los Caprichos, 1799, The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York. Image: © The Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York, Gift of M. Knoedler & Co., 1918

    “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

19

Lot offered with No Reserve

Ya es hora (It Is Time)

2019
Archival pigment print in colors with screenprinted gold leaf, on Hahnemühle paper, with full margins.
I. 10 x 7 1/2 in. (25.4 x 19.1 cm)
S. 14 x 11 in. (35.6 x 27.9 cm)

Signed and annotated 'LESP' in pencil (a Lower East Side Printshop archive proof, the edition was 36 and 10 artist's proofs), published by Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, New York (with the Lower East Side Printshop blindstamp), framed.

Full Cataloguing

Estimate
$500 - 700 

Sold for $1,270

Contact Specialist

editions@phillips.com
212-940-1220

Works from the Lower East Side Printshop Archives

New York Auction 16 April 2024