Description: 7TH ANNUAL SUMMER SALE NOW *Price Shown is the Sale Price ORIGINAL AND VINTAGE .............GENE KLOSS............'TIMSY', ETCHING ON PAPER, 12" x 15"............ This is an 12" x 15" Original and Vintage etching on paper by the very important Taos, NM painter, draftsman and printmaker Gene Kloss, 1903-1996. This etching shows Kloss' dog Timsy. With the title in pencil at lower left. Signed at lower right in pencil. Fine condition. Unframed. The Biography Follows: Gene Kloss arrived in Taos in 1925 while on a camping honeymoon trip with her husband, poet-composer Phillip Kloss. Ms. Kloss brought with her very little other than her 60-pound etching press. From that time until the 1940s, Kloss spent most of the year in Taos and wintered in Berkeley, until she and her husband settled permanently in New Mexico. Kloss was born in Oakland, California in 1903 and established her reputation on the West Coast in the 20s and 30s with several one-woman shows of paintings and etchings in San Francisco and elsewhere. Her reputation spread across the nation through her participation in highly successful group shows. A writer for ArtNews wrote, "Gene Kloss is one of our most sensitive and sympathetic interpreters of the Southwest." One critic called her a "landscape mythic," another a "portrait psychologist," but perhaps the highest praise came from a Taos Indian who said on looking at one of her etchings of a pueblo interior, "Yes, that is the way it was that night at our house." Kloss worked predominantly in three media etching, oil, and watercolor but is best known for her prints of New Mexico subjects. Her etchings demonstrate an imaginative command over the process. The prints display a power and simplicity that make sensitive use of bold, black areas. Frequently there is a minimum of middle tones while rather generous but strategically placed areas of white represent New Mexico light. Despite their relatively small size, Kloss's landscape etchings capture quite convincingly the feeling of vast space associated with New Mexico's northern mountains. She selectively animates the scene and dramatically calls attention to the schism between the slightness of man and the magnitude of his natural surroundings in the Southwest. All of Kloss's compositions are energized by upward rising diagonals, the mark of her own affirmative disposition and of her response to the unique Taos landscape. She would often say, "In this country everything lifts the trees, the mountains, the sky." The body of her works has a consistent harmony in its balanced concern for the subject and for abstract principles of design. "I want the finished print to enable the viewer to see the design, the subject matter from across the room, at arm's length or under a magnifying glass also upside-down for satisfactory abstract design." Whether realistic or illusionistic, a Kloss is remarkably free of detail. As a pattern of line, shape and value, her work is imbued with the power of contrasts, the force of motion, and a grace which is distinctly Kloss. Kloss never sketched or used a camera to record the images she saw in the pueblos. Instead, she committed the feeling and the event to her mind as patterns as in music. The observer in Gene Kloss was filled with sensitivity for the subject matter and an awareness of the musical rhythms of Indian rituals. As she proclaimed, "There has always been a close alliance between my art and music" Every Kloss etching was printed by the artist herself, and it was only in the late 70s that she bought a power-driven massive press built to her specifications. She was a meticulous craftswoman. She did not complete an edition in one printing. There may be years between the concept and the final print in an edition; yet in her inking, wiping and printing of the etching, there is no detectable difference between prints. Quality control of printing was essential in a Gene Kloss etching because her handling of etching ink during the print process was akin to painting. There are deep black areas, sharp whites as clean as fresh paper, and a range of grays. In all the seventy years she so successfully employed this medium, she did not once hand over the printing process to anyone else. In 1950, Gene Kloss was elected an associate member of the National Academy of Design, and to full membership in 1972. However, Kloss elected not to follow her prints on their journeys. A true Westerner, the artist never went east of the Mississippi River. She remained content to stay in the West, where her remarkable career which spanned over seventy years had its source. As ever this is guaranteed 100% money back, to be as represented.
Price: 1050 USD
Location: Santa Fe, New Mexico
End Time: 2025-01-01T14:39:33.000Z
Shipping Cost: 15 USD
Product Images
Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 14 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Artist: Gene Kloss
Unit of Sale: Single Piece
Signed By: Artist
Size: Medium
Item Length: 8 in
Region of Origin: New Mexican
Framing: Unframed
Personalize: No
Year of Production: 1946
Item Height: 5 in
Style: Impression
Features: 1st Edition, Limited Edition
Unit Quantity: One
Culture: American
Handmade: Yes
Time Period Produced: 1925-1949
Image Orientation: Portrait
Signed: Yes
Period: Art Deco (1920-1940)
Title: Timsy
Material: Paper
Certificate of Authenticity (COA): No
Subject: Dog
Type: Print
Theme: Landscape
Production Technique: Etching
Country/Region of Manufacture: United States