Image not available
      
            Rick Barton
      
            Untitled [San Miguel de Allende, Mexico]
      
            Linoleum block print.
      
            15 7/8 x 12 5/16 inches (40.3 x 31.3 cm)
      
            Gift of Andrew Hoyem. NNPM
      
            2022.194 
      
  Notes
              Rick Barton was a Beat-era artist who was active in the San Francisco Bay area in the 1950s and '60s. He was an autodidact with knowledge of a wide variety of artistic styles, many of which he synthesized into his unique manner of line drawing. Although he remained largely obscure, he was well-known to a coterie peers, some of whom he trained as line painters. Among his students was David Nelson, with whom he collaborated on this linoleum block print. Nelson began the print in San Miguel de Allende, Mexico, which was a bohemian outpost in the 1960s. The central figure is a local man in a homemade wheelchair. Nelson says he was initially unhappy with the block, even using it as a cutting board. He and Barton completed it together in Mexico and sold the prints for $2 apiece. The format of the print - a central figure surrounded by vignettes - resembles the prints that comprise Barton's San Francisco Churches (1959). The vignettes include portraits of Barton and Nelson and images from Mesoamerican temples at Teotihuacan.
Ed. 83/103.
          Ed. 83/103.
Inscriptions/Markings
              Inscription, lower left, "dave nelson mexico 1964 rick barton 103 copies #83". Signed lower right: "David Nelson / Richard Barton", with Barton's red ying-yang chopmark. NNPM
          Provenance
              Andrew Hoyam, San Francisco (from the artist); from whom acquired by the Morgan. NNPM
Artist
              
          Classification
              
          Department
              
          Century prints
              
          Catalog link
              
          