(family of gazelles) by William Ernst Hentschel

(family of gazelles) by William Ernst Hentschel

(family of gazelles)

William Ernst Hentschel

Title

(family of gazelles)

 
Artist
Year
1931  
Technique
color airbrush stencil print 
Image Size
15 x 14 1/2" image 
Signature
pencil, lower left; annotated and signed in pencil in lower margin 
Edition Size
proof, edition around 25 
Annotations
"To David With best wishes for a full & fruitful art future / Cin, Ohio, 1931" 
Reference
 
Paper
antique-white wove vellum 
State
proof 
Publisher
artist 
Inventory ID
JEJA110 
Price
SOLD
Description
From the collection and dedicated to artist David Seyler who worked with Hentschel at Rookwood Pottery in Cincinatti, Ohio. Seyler started his own company, Kenton Hills Porcelain in Erlanger, Kentucky and hired Hentschel to work for him. William Ernst Hentschel was born in New York on June 16, 1892. He studied art at the Art Students League, Columbia University, University of Kentucky (degree) and the Cincinnati Art Academy. In 1913 Hentschel was hired as a designer at Rookwood Pottery where he worked until 1932 and produced over 4000 designs. In 1921 he began teaching at the Cincinnati Art Academy until his retirement in 1957. In the early 1928 he developed a printmaking method that involved using an airbrush with multiple stencils. He showed these works at the Closson Gallery in 1929, Roullier’s in Chicago in 1930 and at the Cincinnati Art Museum in 1932. He also had an exhibit of around 40 prints at the Traxel Galleries in Cincinnati in the early ‘30s. He began to call this technique “Aquatone” In 1953 Hentschel developed another innovative technique, again using stencils, but this time utilizing gelatin brayers of different sizes and softness, printing with oil-base ink (rubber rollers with water-base inks). He would cut around 10 stencils to create an image. Each print is unique with this method. Hentschel exhibited 15 works at the Closson Gallery in 1956. Hentschel’s first wife was Russian dancer Halina Feodorova, for whom he designed a dance school in Cincinnati. In 1939 he married former student Alza J. Stratton. William Hentschel died in Burlington, Kentucky in June of 1962.