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Edgar Arceneaux — 1968
Edgar Arceneaux

1968

2005

A dense constellation of handwritten text, diagrammatic notation, and fragmentary imagery fills the surface of this large-scale softground etching, drawing the eye into a web of associative thinking rendered with remarkable tactile immediacy. Edgar Arceneaux's 1968, produced in 2005 through Paulson Fontaine Press, channels the seismic cultural and political upheavals of its titular year into a visual language that feels simultaneously archival and urgent. The softground technique preserves the gestural quality of marks made on paper, lending the composition an intimacy more typical of drawing than printmaking, while the aquatint layers introduce tonal depth that anchors the work's sprawling intellectual energy. Arceneaux is known for building complex, research-driven installations and works on paper that trace the hidden connective tissue between history, science, and social experience. Here, that methodology translates into a single compressed field, where the year 1968 becomes less a date than a nexus, a point at which multiple histories converge and fracture simultaneously. The work invites sustained, close reading rather than passive viewing, rewarding collectors who engage with its layered references over time. Measuring 91.4 by 111.8 centimeters and editioned at thirty, 1968 occupies a significant scale for works on paper while retaining the intimacy of a hand-signed, hand-pulled print. Its generous dimensions allow the compositional density to breathe without overwhelming, and the work presents beautifully unframed, offering flexibility in how it is ultimately housed and displayed.

Medium
Softground etching with aquatint
Sheet
Signed
Yes
Location
Paulson Fontaine Press, Berkeley, CA

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About this work

Edgar Arceneaux, 1968, 2005

A dense constellation of handwritten text, diagrammatic notation, and fragmentary imagery fills the surface of this large-scale softground etching, drawing the eye into a web of associative thinking rendered with remarkable tactile immediacy. Edgar Arceneaux's 1968, produced in 2005 through Paulson Fontaine Press, channels the seismic cultural and political upheavals of its titular year into a visual language that feels simultaneously archival and urgent. The softground technique preserves the gestural quality of marks made on paper, lending the composition an intimacy more typical of drawing than printmaking, while the aquatint layers introduce tonal depth that anchors the work's sprawling intellectual energy. Arceneaux is known for building complex, research-driven installations and works on paper that trace the hidden connective tissue between history, science, and social experience. Here, that methodology translates into a single compressed field, where the year 1968 becomes less a date than a nexus, a point at which multiple histories converge and fracture simultaneously. The work invites sustained, close reading rather than passive viewing, rewarding collectors who engage with its layered references over time. Measuring 91.4 by 111.8 centimeters and editioned at thirty, 1968 occupies a significant scale for works on paper while retaining the intimacy of a hand-signed, hand-pulled print. Its generous dimensions allow the compositional density to breathe without overwhelming, and the work presents beautifully unframed, offering flexibility in how it is ultimately housed and displayed.

Medium
Softground etching with aquatint
Dimensions
sheet: 91.4 x 111.8 cm
Year
2005
Edition
of 30
Signed
Hand-signed by the artist
Seen at
Paulson Fontaine Press, Berkeley, CA

Related themes

Mohn Art Collective

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