Lady Slipper by Henry Herman Evans

Lady Slipper by Henry Herman Evans

Lady Slipper

Henry Herman Evans

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.
Title

Lady Slipper

 
Artist
Year
1967  
Technique
color linoleum cut (linocut) 
Image Size
12 3/4 x 5 1/2" image size 
Signature
pencil, lower right 
Edition Size
55 of 114  
Annotations
pencil titled, dated, and editioned 
Reference
 
Paper
soft, cream Japanese wove 
State
published 
Publisher
artist 
Inventory ID
DASL231 
Price
$300.00 
Description

"Lady Slipper" is from a collection of a San Francisco collector who purchased a number of Evans' linocuts between 1964 and 1970. A "Lady Slipper", also called a moccasin flower, is a member of the orchid family, native to northern North America. Although never common, this plant has vanished from much of its historical range due to habitat loss.

Henry Herman Evans, publisher and printmaker, was born in Superior, Wisconsin in May 16, 1918. He attended the University of California, Berkeley; the City College of San Francisco; the San Francisco State College; and the University of Arizona. Evans opened Porpoise Book Shop, his first bookstore, in Tucson, Arizona in 1942 but relocated to San Francisco in 1944. In 1949 he purchased an 1852 Washington Hand Press and began producing letterpress books as Peregrine Press. He famously rejected publishing Alan Ginsberg's "Howl" though he printed many of the Beat Generation authors, including Rexroth and Ferlinghetti.

In 1958, Evans began creating botanical prints from linoleum and over thirty-one years created around 1,400 subjects, primarily illustrations of plants and flowers, with a special focus on California plants. He was self-taught as a botanist and developed his unique style of rendering portraits of plants and flowers. He drew directly from living subjects which were portrayed life-size. His wife, Marsha Onomiya Evans, printed his linocuts on the Washington Hand Press and, after the printing was completed, the blocks were destroyed. Among his numerous publications, his most important books and portfolios include The State Flowers of the United States (1972); Botanical Prints: With Excerpts from the Artist's Notebooks (1977); and California Native Wildflowersi> (1985).

Evans, an early printer/publisher in San Francisco, founded Peregrine Press in 1949. In 1958 he began creating his own botonical subjects, eventually doing over 1400 images, which he printed with the assistance of his wife Marsha on a 1852 Washington Press.

 

Please call us at 707-546-7352 or email artannex@aol.com to purchase this item.