Three Notes in the September 2025 issue of Print Quarterly may be of interest to CODART members for their material relating to Dutch and Flemish artists.
Dagmar Korbacher’s Note reviewing Making Her Mark: A History of Women Artists in Europe, 1400–1800 highlights the catalogue’s broad approach to discussing women’s art production across all media, citing the centrality of printmaking as a visual source. Within this, the social and gendered contexts of printmaking are also discussed, as well as a call to action towards better research methodologies pertaining to individuals beyond the master artist.
Meanwhile, Daniel Godfrey’s Note discusses Gwendoline de Mûelenaere’s recently published PhD dissertation on Early Modern Thesis Prints in the Southern Netherlands: An Iconological Analysis of the Relationship between Art, Science and Power. He mentions the text’s basic structure, which includes a catalogue of 92 prints with their preparatory drawings, and acknowledges the great variety within the thesis print genre.
Finally, Meredith M. Hale’s Note on Visualising Protestant Monarchy: Ceremony, Art and Politics after the Glorious Revolution (1689–1714) praises the author’s comparative analysis of ceremony in the reigns of William III and Mary II (1689–1702) and Queen Anne (1702–14), especially the material aspects of ceremony and their pictorial strategies.
Contents
A Portrait of Israhel and Ida van Meckenem by Carolyn Yerkes
John Constable’s Working Relationship with David Lucas on the ‘English Landscape’ Series by Elenor Ling and Harry Metcalf
An Activist Art: The Anti-Apartheid Prints of Norman Kaplan by Julian Stallabrass
Shorter Notices
A ‘Power of Women’ Series by Peter Flötner by Léa Monteil
Lithographs from Shanghai of the East Turkestan Engravings, 1890 by Niklas Leverenz
Notes
A History of Women Artists in Europe, 1400–1800 (Making Her Mark: A History of Women Artists in Europe) by Dagmar Korbacher
Southern Netherlandish Thesis Prints (Early Modern Thesis Prints in the Southern Netherlands: An Iconological Analysis of the Relationship between Art, Science and Power) by Daniel Godfrey
Visualising Protestant Monarchy: Ceremony, Art and Politics after the Glorious Revolution (1689–1714) by Meredith M. Hale
Claude Gillot as Satirist (Claude Gillot: Satire in the Age of Reason) by Rena M. Hoisington
John Baptist Jackson in Venice (L’arte di tradurre l’arte: John Baptist Jackson incisore nella Venezia del Settecento) by Michael Snodin
Drawings for Engravings in Eighteenth-Century Spain (Del lapicero al buril. El dibujo para grabar en tiempos de Goya) by Benito Navarrete Prieto
Reproductive Printmaking and Art Illustrations in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries (La storia dell’arte illustrata e la stampa di traduzione tra il XVIII e il XIV secolo) by Giorgio Marini
Audubon as Artist (Audubon as Artist: A New Look at The Birds of America) by Julie Mellby
Books and Graphic Design in Latin America, 1920–1940 (Diagramming Modernity: Books and Graphic Design in Latin America) by Mark McDonald
Honoré Daumier: The Hellwig Collection (Honoré Daumier: Die Sammlung Hellwig) by Anastasia Belyaeva
Why I Collect by Antoine Rouillé d’orfeuil
The London Original Print Fair (The Great War: Britain’s Efforts and Ideals) by Silvia Massa
The Paris Print Fair by Silvia Massa
Catalogue and Book Reviews
Early Colour Printing: German Renaissance Woodcuts by Achim Riether
Berlin’s Collection of Prints by Dürer (Dürer fur Berlin. Eine Spurensuche im Kupferstichkabinett) by Ksenija Tschetschik-Hammerl
Guillaume Lethière by Thea Goldring
Marie Duval (1847–90) Victorian Cartoonist by Richard Taws
The Grosvenor School Linocut by Stephen Coppel
About Print Quarterly
Print Quarterly is the leading international journal dedicated to the art of the print from its origins to the present. It is peer-reviewed. The Journal publishes recent scholarship on a wide range of topics, including printmakers, iconography, social and cultural history, popular culture, print collecting, book illustration, decorative prints, and techniques such as engraving, etching, woodcutting, lithography and digital printmaking. For subscriptions see www.printquarterly.com.