NICOLE EISENMAN

In the fall of 2009, I was teaching printmaking at Bard College, where I met Nicole Eisenman. They were teaching painting and sometimes we would share a ride back to New York.On one trip, we started talking about printmaking, and they said they had made a lot of monotypes on a press in their studio building in Gowanus Brooklyn. The press was set up in a small studio for resident artists to use for their own work. After I suggested we work on some prints at Jungle Press, Nicole invited me to their studio to look at current work. In their studio, I saw drawings everywhere, and paintings in progress: large cartoon-like heads, canvases with themes borrowed from the history of painting, like Pieter Bruegel’s “The Blind Leading the Blind”. The studio was packed with new work. I was bowled over, and asked Nicole when they wanted to start our print project.

Over the next few weeks ,Nicole came to Jungle Press and worked on etchings: images of a world-weary sailor, a family portrait, and a portrait a free-spirited artist looking like Picasso. Then they started working on their first lithograph, and drawing on the stone. They were quick to embrace the drawing materials–litho crayons and pencils and a variety of washes. And we began printing the results: “Sloppy Bar room Kiss”, “Man Holding his Shadow”, “Drummer”. On the largest stone, 43 x 33 in, they drew “Tea Party” a triple portrait of a “big boss” business man, aRevolutionary war figure in a tri-corner hat, and a skeleton all holding a grim-reaper sickle with the American flag. The figures are standing in a pool of water. It is an incredible scathing analysis of the political climate in 2009. Yet Nicole wanted more out of the image, and was looking for inspiration.

It was at this point that I suggested we visit the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s Print Study Room. A wonderful resource, the print study room is open to the public by appointment. Visitors write down which artist’s prints they would like to see, and the prints are retrieved from storage by their remarkable staff, along with extra prints they suggest. Nicole wanted to see Picasso and Munch, and I suggested some others, like Delacroix and Rudolph Bresdin. Picasso’s late prints, the “347 Suite” from 1969 resonated with Nicole. In this suite Picasso performs magic tricks with every etching technique, including one where he seems to mix oil and water together to create a turgid aquatint. “How did he do that?” Nicole asked. “I don’t know, but we can try it,” I said.

When we returned to the printshop, we agreed to try an oil wash over water for the background of “Tea Party.” We brushed water on the stone and Nicole brushed on the oily ink. The result was a watery oil slick-like surface, suggesting the dark and uncertain politics that had inspired the image. Over the next year and a half, Nicole returned almost every Tuesday to work on more prints. There were 16 editions made at Jungle Press during those months, and a wide variety of characters emerged on paper. Along with projects in etching (Harlan and Weaver) and woodcut/monoprint (10 Grand Press), an exhibition of Nicole’s nearly two years of exclusive devotion to printmaking was presented at Koenig and Clinton Gallery in New York in 2012. Later, the artist’s traveling retrospective “Dear Nemesis”, put together by CAM in St. Louis, showcased a large portion of Nicole’s printmaking output enabling an appreciation by a wider audience. 

– Andrew Mockler

PRINTS 2023

Nicole Eisenman’s recent prints from Jungle Press explore etching in two directions. The prints began as a“relief etching”, where Eisenman was able to draw on the copper plate, then etch the drawing into relief on the surface. Each plate was etched for hours. Then, the plate was inked with a roller and printed like a woodcut. The plates were then inked in the traditional intaglio method–creating two versions of the same image. A nuanced shift from one “interpretation” of the plate to a second creates a dialogue between the two inkings.

In “Smoker” we see a figure smoking at the bottom of the page. The smoke swirls around and above the head into a complex woven pattern.

In “Sleep Painting”, a reclining figure in bed is surrounded by a pattern of lines as the artist paints onto a small canvas.

“Old Queen” presents a world-weary monarch leaning in to the viewer. The gaze is shifted slightly downward, looking past us into the space of the room.

In “Three Heads”, the structure of a grid of lines dominates the format. The two figures below stare out of the picture toward the viewer. The two faces seem to meld together, sharing two sets of eyeballs. Above the couple, a larger skull-like head on its side looms forebodingly over all.

With “Architecture Head”, Eisenman uses the structure of the raised lines to construct a cityscape combined with the head of a figure. Printed in red, the overlapping lines suggest bridges and towers morphing into eyes, a nose, cheeks. There is a reward for the viewer who keeps looking through the network of lines, a labyrinth of drawing

– Andrew Mockler

B. 1965, VERDUN, FRANCE

Nicole Eisenman’s work explores a broad range of human emotion with insight and humor. Delving into the highs and the lows of the psyche, they imagines a complex world where characters embrace love, melancholy, spirituality, appetite and desire.
 
Eisenman has shown widely in the U.S. and Europe, including at the Whitney Biennial, and is in the collections of the Museum of Modern Art, New York, NY; The Whitney Museum of American Art, New York, NY; Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Ithaca, NY; The American Academy of Arts and Letters, New York, NY; San Francisco Museum of Modern Art, San Francisco, CA; Denver Art Museum, Denver, CO; Walker Art Center, Minneapolis, MN; The Ludwig Museum, Cologne, Germany.