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Yesterday
Yesterday
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Yesterday

Artist (American, 1893–1963)
Date1940
Mediumwood engraving on cream wove Japan paper
Dimensionsimage: 23.7 × 15.7 cm (9 5/16 × 6 3/16 in.)
sheet: 37 × 26.9 cm (14 9/16 × 10 9/16 in.)
ClassificationsPrints
Credit LineAnonymous gift
Object number1987.57
Label TextPaul Landacre (1893-1963) Though a relief process like woodcuts, wood engravings use burins, tools associated with intaglio engravings, rather than the chisels used to make woodcuts. Further, wood engravings use hard end-grain wood as opposed to the softer woods used in woodcuts. The harder wood allows for finer incisions thereby creating greater detail. However, like a woodcut, the impression results from those areas that are not cut away. Wood engraving mostly declined into a commercial medium for book and newspaper illustration in the nineteenth-century. Paul Landacre resurrected the technique producing white-line wood engravings. Instead of having black lines on a white background, Landacre’s works appear as white images on a black background. The unsigned print with the estate stamp shows slight variation from the signed version on the warmer cream-colored paper. In the final, editioned version, there are additional highlights on the figure’s torso along with cross-hatching added in the area immediately surrounding her body. ProvenanceAnonymous Gift
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Yesterday
Paul Landacre
1940
Yesterday
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