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Latah Creek Washington
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Accession #: | 3230.9 |
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Title: | Latah Creek Washington |
Object Type: | |
Participants: | |
Physical Description: | Woodblock print on paper; image of a farm sitting in the right foreground of a hilly landscape and large clouds on the horizon. |
Description: | Jane Baldwin's woodblock prints capture the essence of the Palouse landscape. Art was essential to sustaining America's spirit during the hard economic times of the 1930s, and Baldwin helped Spokane land an art center funded by President Roosevelt's New Deal. Between 1938 and 1942, the Spokane Art Center was a dynamic force in the community, as thousands of adults and children enrolled in free classes in lithography, painting and other disciplines taught by artists such as Robert Engard and Vanessa Helder. A community gallery offered a space for students, many of whom went on to lead successful art careers of their own. |
Category: | Art |
Subjects/Topics/Concepts: |
Landscape (Artwork->Subject), Print (Artwork)
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Dimensions: |
support height 10 1/4"
support width 8"
image height 7 1/8"
image width 5"
mat height 20"
mat width 16"
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Materials/Techniques: |
woodblock
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Marks/Inscription: |
"Latah Creek Washington," lower left margin; "6/10," lower center margin; "Jane Baldwin," lower right margin; "JB," on plate, lower right corner
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Related Exhibits: | |
Credit Line: | Museum purchase from the artist, 1987 |
Copyright: |
fair use
Through the protection of Fair Use (section 107, title 17, U.S. Code), we are able to provide thumbnail images of works in our collection for which we may not hold the rights. If you are the current rights holder to a work housed in our permanent collection, we would like to make your works available for educational use. Please contact the Registrar to discuss reproduction permissions.
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Through the protection of Fair Use (section 107, title 17, U.S. Code), we are able to provide thumbnail images of works in our collection for which we may not hold the rights. If you are the current rights holder to a work housed in our permanent collection, we would like to make your works available for educational use. Please contact the Registrar to discuss reproduction permissions.
To order a reproduction, inquire about permissions, or for information about prices see:
https://www.northwestmuseum.org/collections