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Currier and Ives

Currier and Ives was a New York City printmaking business operating from 1835 to 1907. Founded by Nathaniel Currier, the company designed and sold inexpensive hand-painted lithographic works based on news events, views of popular culture and Americana. Advertising itself as "the Grand Central Depot for Cheap and Popular Prints,"[1] the corporate name was changed in 1857 to "Currier and Ives" with the addition of James Merritt Ives.

This original work, believed to be done by Louis Maurer, is a hand-painted depiction of a horse race, The Finish, published by Currier & Ives, circa 1852.

A Brush for the Lead, an 1867 lithograph by Currier and Ives

A perennial bestselling series was the Darktown Comics lithographs.

Currier's early history edit

Nathaniel Currier (1813–88) was born in Roxbury, Massachusetts, on March 27, 1813, the second of four children. His parents Nathaniel and Hannah Currier were distant cousins who lived a humble and spartan life. Tragedy struck when Nathaniel was eight years old, when his father unexpectedly died, leaving Nathaniel and his eleven-year-old brother Lorenzo to provide for the family: six-year-old sister Elizabeth and two-year-old brother Charles, as well as their mother.[citation needed]

Nathaniel worked a series of odd jobs to support the family and, at fifteen, he started what became a lifelong career when he apprenticed in the Boston lithography shop of William and John Pendleton.[2] In 1833 at age twenty, he moved to Philadelphia to do contract work for M.E.D. Brown, a noted engraver and printer.[3] Currier's early lithographs were issued under the name of Stodart & Currier, a result of the partnership that he created in 1834 with a local New York printmaker named Stodart. The two men specialized in "job" printing and made a variety of print products, including music manuscripts. Currier became dissatisfied with the poor economic return of their business venture and ended the partnership in 1835. He set up shop alone, working as "N. Currier, Lithographer" until 1856.[citation needed]

In 1835, he created a lithograph that illustrated a fire sweeping through New York City's business district. The print of the Merchant's Exchange sold thousands of copies in four days. Currier realized that there was a market for current news, so he turned out several more disaster prints and other inexpensive lithographs that illustrated local and national events, such as "Ruins of the Planter's Hotel, New Orleans, which fell at two O’clock on the Morning of May 15, 1835, burying 50 persons, 40 of whom Escaped with their Lives".[3] He quickly gained a reputation as an accomplished lithographer.[4] In 1840, he produced "Awful Conflagration of the Steam Boat Lexington", which was so successful that he was given a weekly insert in the New York Sun. In that year, Currier's firm began to shift its focus from job printing to independent print publishing.[5]

Partnership with Ives edit

 
American Homestead Spring, a portrait by Currier and Ives now housed in the Brooklyn Museum
 
Awful Conflagration of the Steam Boat LEXINGTON in Long Island Sound on Monday Eve, an 1840 portrait
 
View on the Harlem River, N. Y., an 1852 portrait by Currier and Ives

The name Currier & Ives first appeared in 1857, when Currier invited the company's bookkeeper and accountant James Merritt Ives (1824–95) to become his partner. Ives was born on March 5, 1824, in New York City, and he married Caroline Clark in 1852. She was the sister-in-law of Nathaniel's brother Charles Currier, and it was Charles who recommended Ives to his brother. Nathaniel Currier soon noticed Ives's dedication to his business, and his artistic knowledge and insight into what the public wanted. The younger man quickly became the general manager of the firm, handling the financial side of the business by modernizing the bookkeeping, reorganizing inventory, and streamlining the print process.[5] Ives also helped Currier interview potential artists and craftsmen. He had a flair for gauging popular interests and aided in selecting the images that the firm would publish and expanding the firm's range to include political satire and sentimental scenes, such as sleigh rides in the country and steamboat races. In 1857, Currier made Ives a full partner.[6][7]

The firm edit

The firm Currier and Ives described itself as "Publishers of Cheap and Popular Prints". At least 7,500 lithographs were published in the firm's 72 years of operation.[8] Artists produced two to three new images every week for 64 years (1834–1895),[9] producing more than a million prints by hand-colored lithography. For the original drawings, Currier & Ives employed or used the work of many celebrated artists of the day including James E. Buttersworth, Charles R. Parsons, George Inness, Thomas Nast, C.H. Moore, and Eastman Johnson.[9] The stars of the firm were Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait, who specialized in sporting scenes; Louis Maurer, who executed genre scenes; George H. Durrie, who supplied winter scenes; and Frances Flora Bond Palmer, who liked to do picturesque panoramas of the American landscape, and who was the first woman in the United States to make her living as a full-time artist.[5]

All lithographs were produced on lithographic limestone printing plates on which the drawing was done by hand. A stone often took over a week to prepare for printing. Each print was pulled by hand. Prints were hand-colored by a dozen or more women, often immigrants from Germany with an art background. They worked in assembly-line fashion, one color to a worker, and were paid $6 for every 100 colored prints. The favored colors were clear and simple, and the drawing was bold and direct.[3][10]

The earliest lithographs were printed in black and then colored by hand. As new techniques were developed, publishers began to produce full-color lithographs that gradually developed softer, more painterly effects. Skilled artist lithographers such as John Cameron, Fanny Palmer, and others became known for their work and signed important pieces. Artists such as A. F. Tait became famous when their paintings were reproduced as lithographs.[11]

Currier and Ives was the most prolific and successful company of lithographers in the U.S. Its lithographs represented every phase of American life, and included the themes of hunting, fishing, whaling, city life, rural scenes, historical scenes, clipper ships, yachts, steamships, the Mississippi River, Hudson River scenes, railroads, politics, comedy, gold mining, winter scenes, commentary on life, portraits, and still lifes.[10] From 1866 on,[12] the firm occupied three floors in a building at 33 Spruce Street in New York:

  • Hand-operated printing presses occupied the third floor.
  • Artists, stone grinders, and lithographers worked on the fourth floor.
  • Colorists worked on the fifth floor.

Small works sold for five to twenty cents each, and large works sold for $1 to $3 apiece. The Currier and Ives firm branched out from its central shop in New York City to sell prints via pushcart vendors, peddlers, and book stores. The firm sold retail as well as wholesale, establishing outlets in cities across the country and in London. It also sold work through the mail (prepaid orders only), and internationally through a London office and agents in Europe.[9][7]

The 19th-century Victorian public was receptive to the firm's products, with its interest in current events and sentimental taste. Currier and Ives prints were among the most popular wall hangings of the day.[10] In 1872, the Currier and Ives catalog proudly proclaimed: "our Prints have become a staple article... in great demand in every part of the country... In fact without exception, all that we have published have met with a quick and ready sale."[3]

Currier & Ives prints were among the household decorations considered appropriate for a proper home by Catharine Esther Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe, authors of American Woman's Home (1869): "The great value of pictures for the home would be, after all, in their sentiment. They should express the sincere ideas and tastes of the household and not the tyrannical dicta of some art critic or neighbor."[4]

Currier died in 1888. Ives remained active in the firm until his death in 1895. Both Currier's and Ives's sons followed their fathers in the business, which was eventually liquidated in 1907.[13] The public demand for lithographs had gradually diminished because of improvements in offset printing and photoengraving.[citation needed]

The lithographs edit

 
The American Fireman, an 1858 lithograph by Louis Maurer for Currier and Ives
 
Central-Park Winter. The skating pond, a lithograph by Currier and Ives, 1862

The prints depicted a variety of images of American life, including winter scenes, horse-racing images, portraits of people, and pictures of ships, sporting events, patriotic, and historical events, including ferocious battles of the American Civil War, the building of cities and railroads, and Lincoln's assassination. Currier and Ives also produced many prints that were inherently racist in nature, particularly in a series of prints called the Darktown Comics. They depicted African Americans in very demeaning ways, making a very clear mockery of them to their white counterparts. These types of images were popular in the 19th century and in high demand. Many of these images are still readily available to view and purchase.[citation needed]

The original lithographs shared similar characteristics in inking and paper, and adhered to folio sizes. Sizes of the images were standard (trade cards, very small folios, small folios, medium folios, large folios), and their measurement did not include the title or borders. These sizes are one of the guides for collectors today in determining if the print is an original or not. "Currier used a cotton based, medium to heavy weight paper depending on the folio size for his prints until the late 1860s. From about 1870, Currier & Ives used paper mixed with a small amount of wood pulp." In addition, Currier's inking process resembled a mixture of elongated splotches and dashes of ink with a few spots, a characteristic that modern reproductions would not possess.[14]

In 1907, the firm was liquidated and most of the lithographic stones had the image removed and were sold by the pound, with some stones' final home being as land fill in Central Park. Those few stones that managed to survive intact were of large folio Clipper Ships, small folio Dark Town Comics, a medium folio "Abraham Lincoln" and a small folio "Washington As A Mason".[14]

  • Currier and Ives Civil War lithographs[15]
  • Known railroad related lithographs of Currier and Ives[16]
  • Currier and Ives: Perspectives on America, American Public Television, Video[17]
  • High Water in the Mississippi, 1868[18]
  • Currier and Ives Darktown Comic Series, Albion College[19]

Today, original Currier and Ives prints are much sought by collectors, and modern reproductions of them are popular decorations. Especially popular are the winter scenes, which are commonly used for American Christmas cards.[citation needed] In 2019 a print of Across the Continent by Fanny Palmer sold at auction for over US$60,000.[20]

 
Statue of Liberty lithograph

Racist lithographs edit

Currier and Ives, because they were targeting a middle-class American customer, inadvertently created a "pictorial record" of values in the United States in the 19th century, which included contemporary racism.[21][22]: 13  According to Albert Baragwanath, of the approximately 500 "comic prints" produced by Currier and Ives, "more than half of these were the so-called Darktown Comics whose humor lay in gross burlesque."[22]: 104 

The Darktown Comics series was perennially among the bestselling of Currier & Ives' over 7000 lithographs, with at least one selling 73,000 copies via pushcarts and in shops and country stores.[23][24][25][26] According to J. Michael Martinez, every one of the series was a bestseller.[27]: 197 

Thomas Worth recreated a previous Statue of Liberty image, using an African American woman similar to the mammy figure holding a torch as part of their Darktown Comics series.[citation needed]

In popular culture edit

  • Currier and Ives Suite (1935) is an orchestral composition by Bernard Herrmann.[28]
  • The 1948 holiday song "Sleigh Ride" includes the line, "It'll nearly be like a picture print by Currier and Ives".
  • A 1960 episode of the Twilight Zone, A Stop at Willoughby, refers to the eponymous town as being "like something out of a Currier and Ives painting".
  • The Haunted Mansion Holiday at Disneyland Park makes reference to Currier and Ives. When guests enter the ballroom scene the ghost host says, "All at once, happy haunts did materialize, like a nightmarish painting by Currier & Ives."
  • In Walter Tevis's short story collection Far from Home, Currier and Ives prints appear in "Echo" and "A Visit from Mother".
  • In The West Wing's fifth-season episode "Abu El Banat", First Lady Abbey Bartlet says "We've never been Currier and Ives" to President Jed Bartlet while they are discussing their unconventional marriage and family life, specifically with regard to the Christmas season.
  • In the 2007 horror film 1408, Mike Enslin, when describing the haunted hotel room, refers to the painting of the schooner lost at sea as being "done in the predictably dull fashion of Currier and Ives".
  • In the science fiction novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep? by Philip K. Dick, the Voigt-Kampff test includes a scenario question where the person taking the test has to imagine he rents a cabin in the woods decorated with Currier and Ives prints on the walls.

Gallery of images edit

References edit

  1. ^ . Hfmgv.org. December 18, 2002. Archived from the original on May 12, 2013. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  2. ^ The Currier and Ives Foundation, "The history of Currier & Ives"
  3. ^ a b c d Bob Brooke, "The Enduring Appeal of Currier and Ives Prints"
  4. ^ a b "Currier and Ives: An American Panorama". Tfaoi.com. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  5. ^ a b c Biography at answers.com
  6. ^ "The Old Print Shop". The Old Print Shop. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  7. ^ a b Encyclopædia Britannica Online "Currier and Ives"
  8. ^ . Ohio.edu. Archived from the original on September 27, 2011. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  9. ^ a b c "tfaoi.com". tfaoi.com. April 21, 2004. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  10. ^ a b c "The Long Island Museum of American History and Carriages". Tfaoi.com. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  11. ^ "Currier and Ives: Popular Masters of 19th Century Lithography"
  12. ^ . philaprintshop.com. Archived from the original on December 24, 2008. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  13. ^ "Currier & Ives". The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2008. Retrieved August 3, 2009.
  14. ^ a b "Currier and Ives Lithographic Value Guides". Currierprints.com. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  15. ^ Commons.wikimedia.org
  16. ^ . coxrail.com. Archived from the original on June 9, 2009. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  17. ^ "aptonline.org". aptonline.org. August 28, 2013. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  18. ^ "pbs.org". pbs.org. Retrieved November 16, 2013.
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on July 16, 2009. Retrieved October 20, 2019.
  20. ^ "Currier & Ives print sets auction record at $62,500". Antique Trader. May 8, 2019. Retrieved August 9, 2022.
  21. ^ Le Beau, Bryan (Spring 2000). "African Americans in Currier and Ives's America: The darktown series". Journal of American and Comparative Cultures. Retrieved February 15, 2021.
  22. ^ a b Currier & Ives (1980). Currier & Ives. Albert K. Baragwanath. New York: Abbeville Press. ISBN 0-89659-092-5. OCLC 6086252.
  23. ^ Gale, Robert L. (1993). A Cultural Encyclopedia of the 1850s in America. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-28524-0.
  24. ^ Harris, Michael D. (2003). Colored Pictures: Race and Visual Representation. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-2760-4.
  25. ^ Peters, Harry T. (1948). Currier & Ives, Printmakers to the American People. Doubleday.
  26. ^ William Fletcher Thompson, Jr. (1962). "Pictorial Propaganda and the Civil War". The Wisconsin Magazine of History. 46 (1): 21–31. ISSN 0043-6534. JSTOR 4633807.
  27. ^ Martinez, J. Michael (April 14, 2016). A Long Dark Night: Race in America from Jim Crow to World War II. Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-4422-5996-6.
  28. ^ "Film Score Daily Articles". filmscoremonthly.com. Retrieved October 20, 2019.

Further reading edit

  • LeBeau, Bryan F. Currier and Ives: America Imagined. Washington, D.C.: Smithsonian Institution Press, 2001.
  • Reilly, Bernard. Currier and Ives: A Catalogue Raisonné. Detroit: Gale Research, 1984.
  • King, Roy and Davis, Burke The World of Currier & Ives. New York: Bonanza Books, 1968.[1]

External links edit

  • Currier and Ives Cat Prints
  • Currier & Ives, Printmakers to the American People on Traditional Fine Arts Organization
  • Library of Congress Digital Resources; search Currier and Ives
  • Behind the Scenes: The Artists Who Worked for Currier and Ives
  • Currier and Ives Tradecards
  • Currier and Ives, Perspectives on America
  • Harriet Endicott Waite research material concerning Currier & Ives, 1923-1956 from the Smithsonian Archives of American Art
  1. ^ The World of Currier & Ives. OCLC. OCLC 422196309.

currier, ives, york, city, printmaking, business, operating, from, 1835, 1907, founded, nathaniel, currier, company, designed, sold, inexpensive, hand, painted, lithographic, works, based, news, events, views, popular, culture, americana, advertising, itself, . Currier and Ives was a New York City printmaking business operating from 1835 to 1907 Founded by Nathaniel Currier the company designed and sold inexpensive hand painted lithographic works based on news events views of popular culture and Americana Advertising itself as the Grand Central Depot for Cheap and Popular Prints 1 the corporate name was changed in 1857 to Currier and Ives with the addition of James Merritt Ives This original work believed to be done by Louis Maurer is a hand painted depiction of a horse race The Finish published by Currier amp Ives circa 1852 A Brush for the Lead an 1867 lithograph by Currier and IvesA perennial bestselling series was the Darktown Comics lithographs Contents 1 Currier s early history 2 Partnership with Ives 3 The firm 4 The lithographs 4 1 Racist lithographs 5 In popular culture 6 Gallery of images 7 References 8 Further reading 9 External linksCurrier s early history editNathaniel Currier 1813 88 was born in Roxbury Massachusetts on March 27 1813 the second of four children His parents Nathaniel and Hannah Currier were distant cousins who lived a humble and spartan life Tragedy struck when Nathaniel was eight years old when his father unexpectedly died leaving Nathaniel and his eleven year old brother Lorenzo to provide for the family six year old sister Elizabeth and two year old brother Charles as well as their mother citation needed Nathaniel worked a series of odd jobs to support the family and at fifteen he started what became a lifelong career when he apprenticed in the Boston lithography shop of William and John Pendleton 2 In 1833 at age twenty he moved to Philadelphia to do contract work for M E D Brown a noted engraver and printer 3 Currier s early lithographs were issued under the name of Stodart amp Currier a result of the partnership that he created in 1834 with a local New York printmaker named Stodart The two men specialized in job printing and made a variety of print products including music manuscripts Currier became dissatisfied with the poor economic return of their business venture and ended the partnership in 1835 He set up shop alone working as N Currier Lithographer until 1856 citation needed In 1835 he created a lithograph that illustrated a fire sweeping through New York City s business district The print of the Merchant s Exchange sold thousands of copies in four days Currier realized that there was a market for current news so he turned out several more disaster prints and other inexpensive lithographs that illustrated local and national events such as Ruins of the Planter s Hotel New Orleans which fell at two O clock on the Morning of May 15 1835 burying 50 persons 40 of whom Escaped with their Lives 3 He quickly gained a reputation as an accomplished lithographer 4 In 1840 he produced Awful Conflagration of the Steam Boat Lexington which was so successful that he was given a weekly insert in the New York Sun In that year Currier s firm began to shift its focus from job printing to independent print publishing 5 Partnership with Ives edit nbsp American Homestead Spring a portrait by Currier and Ives now housed in the Brooklyn Museum nbsp Awful Conflagration of the Steam Boat LEXINGTON in Long Island Sound on Monday Eve an 1840 portrait nbsp View on the Harlem River N Y an 1852 portrait by Currier and IvesThe name Currier amp Ives first appeared in 1857 when Currier invited the company s bookkeeper and accountant James Merritt Ives 1824 95 to become his partner Ives was born on March 5 1824 in New York City and he married Caroline Clark in 1852 She was the sister in law of Nathaniel s brother Charles Currier and it was Charles who recommended Ives to his brother Nathaniel Currier soon noticed Ives s dedication to his business and his artistic knowledge and insight into what the public wanted The younger man quickly became the general manager of the firm handling the financial side of the business by modernizing the bookkeeping reorganizing inventory and streamlining the print process 5 Ives also helped Currier interview potential artists and craftsmen He had a flair for gauging popular interests and aided in selecting the images that the firm would publish and expanding the firm s range to include political satire and sentimental scenes such as sleigh rides in the country and steamboat races In 1857 Currier made Ives a full partner 6 7 The firm editThe firm Currier and Ives described itself as Publishers of Cheap and Popular Prints At least 7 500 lithographs were published in the firm s 72 years of operation 8 Artists produced two to three new images every week for 64 years 1834 1895 9 producing more than a million prints by hand colored lithography For the original drawings Currier amp Ives employed or used the work of many celebrated artists of the day including James E Buttersworth Charles R Parsons George Inness Thomas Nast C H Moore and Eastman Johnson 9 The stars of the firm were Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait who specialized in sporting scenes Louis Maurer who executed genre scenes George H Durrie who supplied winter scenes and Frances Flora Bond Palmer who liked to do picturesque panoramas of the American landscape and who was the first woman in the United States to make her living as a full time artist 5 All lithographs were produced on lithographic limestone printing plates on which the drawing was done by hand A stone often took over a week to prepare for printing Each print was pulled by hand Prints were hand colored by a dozen or more women often immigrants from Germany with an art background They worked in assembly line fashion one color to a worker and were paid 6 for every 100 colored prints The favored colors were clear and simple and the drawing was bold and direct 3 10 The earliest lithographs were printed in black and then colored by hand As new techniques were developed publishers began to produce full color lithographs that gradually developed softer more painterly effects Skilled artist lithographers such as John Cameron Fanny Palmer and others became known for their work and signed important pieces Artists such as A F Tait became famous when their paintings were reproduced as lithographs 11 Currier and Ives was the most prolific and successful company of lithographers in the U S Its lithographs represented every phase of American life and included the themes of hunting fishing whaling city life rural scenes historical scenes clipper ships yachts steamships the Mississippi River Hudson River scenes railroads politics comedy gold mining winter scenes commentary on life portraits and still lifes 10 From 1866 on 12 the firm occupied three floors in a building at 33 Spruce Street in New York Hand operated printing presses occupied the third floor Artists stone grinders and lithographers worked on the fourth floor Colorists worked on the fifth floor Small works sold for five to twenty cents each and large works sold for 1 to 3 apiece The Currier and Ives firm branched out from its central shop in New York City to sell prints via pushcart vendors peddlers and book stores The firm sold retail as well as wholesale establishing outlets in cities across the country and in London It also sold work through the mail prepaid orders only and internationally through a London office and agents in Europe 9 7 The 19th century Victorian public was receptive to the firm s products with its interest in current events and sentimental taste Currier and Ives prints were among the most popular wall hangings of the day 10 In 1872 the Currier and Ives catalog proudly proclaimed our Prints have become a staple article in great demand in every part of the country In fact without exception all that we have published have met with a quick and ready sale 3 Currier amp Ives prints were among the household decorations considered appropriate for a proper home by Catharine Esther Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe authors of American Woman s Home 1869 The great value of pictures for the home would be after all in their sentiment They should express the sincere ideas and tastes of the household and not the tyrannical dicta of some art critic or neighbor 4 Currier died in 1888 Ives remained active in the firm until his death in 1895 Both Currier s and Ives s sons followed their fathers in the business which was eventually liquidated in 1907 13 The public demand for lithographs had gradually diminished because of improvements in offset printing and photoengraving citation needed The lithographs edit nbsp The American Fireman an 1858 lithograph by Louis Maurer for Currier and Ives nbsp Central Park Winter The skating pond a lithograph by Currier and Ives 1862The prints depicted a variety of images of American life including winter scenes horse racing images portraits of people and pictures of ships sporting events patriotic and historical events including ferocious battles of the American Civil War the building of cities and railroads and Lincoln s assassination Currier and Ives also produced many prints that were inherently racist in nature particularly in a series of prints called the Darktown Comics They depicted African Americans in very demeaning ways making a very clear mockery of them to their white counterparts These types of images were popular in the 19th century and in high demand Many of these images are still readily available to view and purchase citation needed The original lithographs shared similar characteristics in inking and paper and adhered to folio sizes Sizes of the images were standard trade cards very small folios small folios medium folios large folios and their measurement did not include the title or borders These sizes are one of the guides for collectors today in determining if the print is an original or not Currier used a cotton based medium to heavy weight paper depending on the folio size for his prints until the late 1860s From about 1870 Currier amp Ives used paper mixed with a small amount of wood pulp In addition Currier s inking process resembled a mixture of elongated splotches and dashes of ink with a few spots a characteristic that modern reproductions would not possess 14 In 1907 the firm was liquidated and most of the lithographic stones had the image removed and were sold by the pound with some stones final home being as land fill in Central Park Those few stones that managed to survive intact were of large folio Clipper Ships small folio Dark Town Comics a medium folio Abraham Lincoln and a small folio Washington As A Mason 14 Currier and Ives Civil War lithographs 15 Known railroad related lithographs of Currier and Ives 16 Currier and Ives Perspectives on America American Public Television Video 17 High Water in the Mississippi 1868 18 Currier and Ives Darktown Comic Series Albion College 19 Today original Currier and Ives prints are much sought by collectors and modern reproductions of them are popular decorations Especially popular are the winter scenes which are commonly used for American Christmas cards citation needed In 2019 a print of Across the Continent by Fanny Palmer sold at auction for over US 60 000 20 nbsp Statue of Liberty lithographRacist lithographs edit Main article Darktown Comics Currier and Ives because they were targeting a middle class American customer inadvertently created a pictorial record of values in the United States in the 19th century which included contemporary racism 21 22 13 According to Albert Baragwanath of the approximately 500 comic prints produced by Currier and Ives more than half of these were the so called Darktown Comics whose humor lay in gross burlesque 22 104 The Darktown Comics series was perennially among the bestselling of Currier amp Ives over 7000 lithographs with at least one selling 73 000 copies via pushcarts and in shops and country stores 23 24 25 26 According to J Michael Martinez every one of the series was a bestseller 27 197 Thomas Worth recreated a previous Statue of Liberty image using an African American woman similar to the mammy figure holding a torch as part of their Darktown Comics series citation needed In popular culture editThis section possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed February 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Currier and Ives Suite 1935 is an orchestral composition by Bernard Herrmann 28 The 1948 holiday song Sleigh Ride includes the line It ll nearly be like a picture print by Currier and Ives A 1960 episode of the Twilight Zone A Stop at Willoughby refers to the eponymous town as being like something out of a Currier and Ives painting The Haunted Mansion Holiday at Disneyland Park makes reference to Currier and Ives When guests enter the ballroom scene the ghost host says All at once happy haunts did materialize like a nightmarish painting by Currier amp Ives In Walter Tevis s short story collection Far from Home Currier and Ives prints appear in Echo and A Visit from Mother In The West Wing s fifth season episode Abu El Banat First Lady Abbey Bartlet says We ve never been Currier and Ives to President Jed Bartlet while they are discussing their unconventional marriage and family life specifically with regard to the Christmas season In the 2007 horror film 1408 Mike Enslin when describing the haunted hotel room refers to the painting of the schooner lost at sea as being done in the predictably dull fashion of Currier and Ives In the science fiction novel Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep by Philip K Dick the Voigt Kampff test includes a scenario question where the person taking the test has to imagine he rents a cabin in the woods decorated with Currier and Ives prints on the walls Gallery of images edit nbsp Kiss Me Quick 1840s nbsp Explosion Aboard the USS Princeton 1844 nbsp John Brown as Christ en route to his execution 1859 Above his head the flag of Virginia and its motto Sic semper tyrannis Thus always to tyrants From a now lost original by Louis Ransom nbsp Destruction of the Rebel Monster Merrimac off Craney Island May 11th 1862 nbsp The Falls of Niagara From the Canada Side 1868 nbsp City of New York Showing the building of the Equitable Life Assurance Society of the United States No 120 Broadway 1883 nbsp The Life of a Fireman lithograph by Louis Maurer for Currier and Ives nbsp Friendship love and truth nbsp Across the Continent Westward the Course of Empire Takes its Way by Fanny Palmer 1868 References edit The Henry Ford Collections Hfmgv org December 18 2002 Archived from the original on May 12 2013 Retrieved November 16 2013 The Currier and Ives Foundation The history of Currier amp Ives a b c d Bob Brooke The Enduring Appeal of Currier and Ives Prints a b Currier and Ives An American Panorama Tfaoi com Retrieved November 16 2013 a b c Biography at answers com The Old Print Shop The Old Print Shop Retrieved November 16 2013 a b Encyclopaedia Britannica Online Currier and Ives Ohio University News and Information Ohio edu Archived from the original on September 27 2011 Retrieved November 16 2013 a b c tfaoi com tfaoi com April 21 2004 Retrieved November 16 2013 a b c The Long Island Museum of American History and Carriages Tfaoi com Retrieved November 16 2013 Currier and Ives Popular Masters of 19th Century Lithography philaprintshop com philaprintshop com Archived from the original on December 24 2008 Retrieved November 16 2013 Currier amp Ives The Columbia Encyclopedia Sixth Edition 2008 Retrieved August 3 2009 a b Currier and Ives Lithographic Value Guides Currierprints com Retrieved November 16 2013 Commons wikimedia org coxrail com coxrail com Archived from the original on June 9 2009 Retrieved November 16 2013 aptonline org aptonline org August 28 2013 Retrieved November 16 2013 pbs org pbs org Retrieved November 16 2013 albion edu Archived from the original on July 16 2009 Retrieved October 20 2019 Currier amp Ives print sets auction record at 62 500 Antique Trader May 8 2019 Retrieved August 9 2022 Le Beau Bryan Spring 2000 African Americans in Currier and Ives s America The darktown series Journal of American and Comparative Cultures Retrieved February 15 2021 a b Currier amp Ives 1980 Currier amp Ives Albert K Baragwanath New York Abbeville Press ISBN 0 89659 092 5 OCLC 6086252 Gale Robert L 1993 A Cultural Encyclopedia of the 1850s in America Greenwood Press ISBN 978 0 313 28524 0 Harris Michael D 2003 Colored Pictures Race and Visual Representation University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 2760 4 Peters Harry T 1948 Currier amp Ives Printmakers to the American People Doubleday William Fletcher Thompson Jr 1962 Pictorial Propaganda and the Civil War The Wisconsin Magazine of History 46 1 21 31 ISSN 0043 6534 JSTOR 4633807 Martinez J Michael April 14 2016 A Long Dark Night Race in America from Jim Crow to World War II Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 4422 5996 6 Film Score Daily Articles filmscoremonthly com Retrieved October 20 2019 Further reading editLeBeau Bryan F Currier and Ives America Imagined Washington D C Smithsonian Institution Press 2001 Reilly Bernard Currier and Ives A Catalogue Raisonne Detroit Gale Research 1984 King Roy and Davis Burke The World of Currier amp Ives New York Bonanza Books 1968 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Currier and Ives Currier and Ives Cat Prints Currier amp Ives Foundation Online Gallery of Currier amp Ives Prints Currier amp Ives Printmakers to the American People on Traditional Fine Arts Organization Currier and Ives Printmakers to the People A Gallery of Currier and Ives Lithographs Library of Congress Digital Resources search Currier and Ives Behind the Scenes The Artists Who Worked for Currier and Ives Currier and Ives Tradecards Currier and Ives Perspectives on America Harriet Endicott Waite research material concerning Currier amp Ives 1923 1956 from the Smithsonian Archives of American Art The World of Currier amp Ives OCLC OCLC 422196309 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Currier and Ives amp oldid 1186698892, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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