There are clues in the memos that follow.
In the monthly memo with the William Rockhill Nelson Gallery of Art
and Atkins Museum of Fine Arts, May 12-31 of 1935
there is the following news flash.
"THE WOODCUT SOCIETY: Due to the cooperation of its director, Mr. Alfred Fowler, the Third Annual Exhibition of the Woodcut Society is inaugurating its tour of the United States in our Print Galleries. This year's group is especially fine and has representations from America, Europe, Japan, and Australia. There are outstanding works Lionel Lindsay,
Thomas W. Nason, C.F. Tunnicliffe, Frau Nortertine von Bressleru-Roth, and Y. Urushibara. It will remain on exhibition until Mar 15th."
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Many of these artists are known within the Woodcut Society with the exception of two. (Neither one of these are in the Nelson-Adkins Museum of Art print collection.) C.F. Tunnelicliffe and Yoshijiro Urushibara. Double click on images to enlarge.
C.F. Tunnelicliffe (1901-1979)
See Tunnelicliffe examples:
'The Shorthorn Bull', Wood Engraving, 1935
'Stallion and Groom', Wood Engraving, c. 1935
See bio on C.F. Tunnelicliffe of Cheshire,
England HERE and HERE
"Success drove Tunnicliffe ever more towards wood engraving as a graphic medium. He had adapted to it very quickly and the speed and proficiency with
which he engraved his blocks were quite remarkable. He told the publishers of A
Book of Birds (1937) that he expected to complete between seventy and eighty
engravings within three months."
(Tunnelicliffe images courtesy of Fine Print Shop-United Kingdom, http://www.fineprintshop.co.uk/browse.asp?types=Tunnicliffe%2C+C%2E+F%2E+%281901%2D79%29+Memorial+Collection+Part+One&reset=1, accessed Sept. 29, 2012)
Yoshijiro Urushibara (Japanese 1888-1953), also known as Mokuchu
See Urushibara examples:
(courtesy of Haji-b, http://haji-b.blogspot.com.au/, accessed Sept. 29, 2012)
(courtesy of Haji-b, http://haji-b.blogspot.com.au/, accessed Sept. 29, 2012)
"Cyclamen", Paper Size: 348 x 235 mm, Image Size: 302 x 202 mm
(courtesy of Fine Print Shop, http://www.fineprintshop.co.uk/urushibara%2C-yoshijiro-%281888-1953%29%2C-%27cyclamen%27%2C-colour-woodcut%2C-1920s.~849, accessed Sept. 29, 2012)
Seaby learned colour woodcut from Frank Morley Fletcher, Phillips was self-taught and no one knows about John Platt. Urushibara helped them improve their printing technique.
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