Revisiting America: The Prints of Currier & Ives

Revisiting America: The Prints of Currier & Ives
Collection of Joslyn Art Museum (Omaha, NE), Gift of Conagra Brands, 2016.20.397

Charles Parsons (American, b. England, 1821–1910), Lyman W. Atwater (American, 1835–1891), Central Park, Winter. The Skating Pond, 1862. Lithograph.

Known today for its lush, hand-colored lithographs that nostalgically depicted a republic of pioneer homesteads, sporting camps, and bucolic pastimes, these sentimental images comprised only one aspect of Currier & Ives’s production. The company’s inexpensive and popular prints were a ubiquitous presence for decades, and just as frequently touched on pressing social and political issues. Addressing economic development, western expansion, the Civil War, and controversies of racial and class politics, Currier & Ives portrayed scenes of urbanization, nation building, naval battles, catastrophic disasters, and current events that were far from idyllic.

Revisiting America: The Prints of Currier & Ives explores how the largest printmaking company in nineteenth-century America visualized the nation’s social, political, and industrial fabric. The exhibition is on view at Joslyn November 21, 2020, through April 11, 2021.

Event Information
Start Date: November 21, 2020
End Date: April 11, 2021
City: Omaha, NE
Venue: Joslyn Art Museum

Revisiting America: The Prints of Currier & Ives