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John W. Winkler Signature Initial |
Master of Line John
W. Winkler
American Etcher
By Mary Millman and Dave Bohn
- An illustrated biography
- A "Rediscovery" of one of America's greatest etchers.
- Celebrating the 100th anniversary of John W. Winkler's Birth
- Placing Winkler in terms of the American History of Etchers
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A
limited quantity of this unique book of John W. Winkler's works
is made available through this website.
Price
- $40 plus $8 shipping
For
Purchase Information -- |
ISBN - 0-88496-358-6
Size -- 11" x 9", 192
pages, 92 illustrations 106# paper, matt-coated stock
Hard-cover only
Published by Capra Press, Santa Barbara
Printed in Japan |
Contains:
- Full biographical
text (footnoted),
- Etchings,
- Drawings,
- Photographs
of the Artist,
- Introduction,
- Epilogue (by
Marci Thomas),
- Reminiscence
(by Dave Bohn),
- Afterword
(by Gladys Hansen,
former
San Francisco City Historian),
- Winkler
Chronology,
- Index,
- List of Plates.
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From the Dust Cover --
John
W. Winkler (1894-1979) was born in Vienna and, with the aid of
his mother and grandmother, left for the United States in 1910
on a forged passport, never thereafter to reveal his birth names.
Once in the New World he was determined to meet Buffalo Bill and
see the Indians. Reaching San Francisco by 1912, he stumbled upon
the entryway of the San Francisco Institute of Art and enrolled on
impulse to learn "cartooning" -- and thereby make a million dollars.
But about three weeks into the course he discovered fine art and never
looked back. By 1918 he had become a master pure-line etcher and
by 1920 had earned the title "artist laureate of San Francisco."
Bertha Jacques in Chicago would later compare him to Rembrandt, and
John Taylor Arms referred to him in 1934 as "Master of Line" and
in 1940 as "Master of us all."
Winkler's great reputation as an etcher, however, served to obscure
his later work, notably the pencil and pen-and-ink drawings, the conte
crayon and carbon pencil drawings of high Sierra trees, and the carved
rootwood boxes -- more than two hundred of them -- which took twenty
years to produce.
Winkler was an extraordinary artist and no less an extraordinary
human being. The authors -- one of whom knew the subject for the
last seventeen years of his life -- have experienced a nine-year
odyssey in putting together the pieces of this Ameerican etcher's
distinguished career. Winkler never managed to meet Buffalo Bill,
but he certainly did meet his destiny.
For
Purchase Information --
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