Details
RICHARD BOSMAN (B. 1944)
Man Overboard
woodcut in colors, on simili-Japan paper, 1981, signed in pencil, numbered 'A.P 5/10' (an artist's proof, the edition was 36), published by Brooke Alexander Editions, New York, with full margins, in good condition, framed
Image: 2378 x 15 in. (606 x 381 mm.)
Sheet: 2658 x 1638 in. (676 x 416 mm.)
Literature
Stevens 24
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Lot Essay

Beginning in the mid-1970s, the desire for more tactile surfaces led some American printmakers to revive the use of woodcut. Like the German Expressionists at the beginning of the 20th century, Bosman likes his prints to have a handmade, chiseled appearance, reflecting the ragged gouged areas and splintered edges left on the woodblock. This powerful, agitated style of gestural immediacy parallels the emotional content of the desperate situations he depicts. Although the narrative in Bosman's scenes is not specified, the allusion to danger and a mysterious aura provoke the viewer's imagination. The figure in Man Overboard, dressed in a suit and tie but shoeless, plummets headfirst toward moonlit waters beside an ocean liner. Frozen in time between the unknown cause and climax of the situation, the image remains unresolved and full of suspense.

- The Cleveland Museum of Art (online)

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