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Cruelty of Insects | musefully
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Hayter, Stanley William. Cruelty of Insects, 1942. Cranach wove paper, Image: 20.1 x 24.9 cm (7 15/16 x 9 13/16 in.); Sheet: 30.5 x 41.2 cm (12 x 16 1/4 in.). Gift of Peter N. Leicht and Derrick B. Strobl in honor of their parents Peter Leicht, Mary E. Leicht and Carole L. Strobl, 2020.411. Copyrighted.
Cruelty of Insects
1942
Stanley William Hayter
Stanley William Hayter (British, 1901–1988)
Prints
Cruelty of Insects, 1942. Stanley William Hayter (British, 1901–1988). Cranach wove paper; image: 20.1 x 24.9 cm (7 15/16 x 9 13/16 in.); sheet: 30.5 x 41.2 cm (12 x 16 1/4 in.). The Cleveland Museum of Art, Gift of Peter N. Leicht and Derrick B. Strobl in honor of their parents Peter Leicht, Mary E. Leicht and Carole L. Strobl 2020.411 Stanley William Hayter is recognized within the history of printmaking as among the most innovative and experimental practitioners of intaglio techniques. After moving to New York from Paris in 1939, he developed a style influenced by Surrealism which proliferated at the time among New York School painters. This print features invented biomorphic forms inspired by the movement and uses overlapping and intertwining lines to draw the viewer into invented space. At the time when Stanley William Hayter made this print, relatively few artists worked in engraving, finding the technique too laborious.
Image: 20.1 x 24.9 cm (7 15/16 x 9 13/16 in.); Sheet: 30.5 x 41.2 cm (12 x 16 1/4 in.)
Inscribed
Inscription: signed and dated, at lower right, in plate: Hayter 42; signed, at lower right, in pencil: SWHayter; inscribed at lower left, in pencil: 4/30; at bottom center: Cruelty of Insects; at lower left: no1