Bertha E. Jaques and the Chicago Society of Etchers
By Joby Patterson
Subjects: Chicago Society of Etchers, History, American Etching, Etching, history, Etchers
Description: "The "Needle Club" came to life when four artists met on the rooftop porch of a Chicago house on a hot, moonlit night in August 1909. This "Needle Club" soon developed into the Chicago Society of Etchers. Although the organization exhibited at least forty thousand prints across America over its life of forty-seven years, its impact has never been investigated or evaluated.". "Bertha E. Jaques and the Chicago Society of Etchers relates the vigorous and eventful life of the CSE and its relationship to the broad social, economic, and artistic setting of the era. This organization, along with other etching societies modeled after it, played a substantial role in developing popular artistic taste in the first half of the twentieth century in America. Almost overnight, prints became available to a new, receptive public whose confidence had been lost after a wide misrepresentation in prints during the late nineteenth century. The innovative and energetic methods used by the CSE to effectively supply the needs of artists and create a new buying market, and the ways in which the Society integrated itself into the existing cultural milieu compose a remarkable success story which could only have evolved out of cultural circumstances existing at the beginning of the century. The Society achieved a powerful position once it gained the trusting eye of the public, enabling it to encourage styles and sway trends, which it did through exhibitions and economic return to its artists. How it dealt with pre-World War I opportunity and tremendous popularity in the twenties, and how it struggled through the Depression years reveal a remarkably resilient organization backed by effective leadership."--BOOK JACKET.
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