New Exhibition Links the Images of Thomas Nason with the Verse of Robert Frost
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New Exhibition Links the Images of Thomas Nason with the Verse of Robert Frost
Thomas Nason, The Leaning Silo, 1932, chiaroscuro wood engraving, Florence Griswold Museum.



OLD LYME, CT.- The Road Less Traveled: Thomas Nason’s Rural New England, on view at the Florence Griswold Museum in Old Lyme, Connecticut from January 17 through April 12, examines the visual poetry of printmaker Thomas W. Nason (1889-1971). The exhibition draws parallels between the carefully carved, deliberate lines of Nason’s wood engravings and the thoughtfully chosen, measured language of poet laureate Robert Frost, with whom he collaborated. Several of Frost’s and Nason’s rare chapbooks and other limited editions are also on view along with a choice selection of items from Nason’s studio, such as the artist’s tools, blocks, and personal library, to help to illuminate the technique and career of one of New England’s most revered printmakers.

Nason’s romanticized versions of New England farms and his views of the region’s undisturbed countryside earned him the name “poet engraver of New England.” Nason’s illustrations proved appropriate for several American poets. Publishers commissioned him for comprehensive volumes on William Cullen Bryant and Henry David Thoreau. However, “Nason’s engravings were never more closely aligned with poetry than when he illustrated the verse of Robert Frost,” states Amanda Burdan, the Museum’s first Catherine Fehrer Curatorial Fellow and curator of the exhibition. The title of the exhibition, The Road Less Traveled, is a nod to Frost’s poem “The Road Not Taken.” “Frost’s poems, like Nason’s prints, pay tribute to rural life in colloquial terms,” says Burdan. Frost’s status as the quintessential rural New Englander, writing in simple, direct, and yet forceful terms about American life makes a ready comparison to Nason’s life and work.

Raised on a farm in Billerica, Massachusetts, by what he called “a practical lot of Yankees,” Thomas Nason’s first career was in business. It wasn’t until 1921 that he began to teach himself the art of printmaking. Nason tutored himself in the workings of various presses and a variety of print techniques through books and observation. In 1931 Nason and his wife Margaret bought an abandoned farm in Lyme, Connecticut. There he continued to study and work at his craft until his death at 82 in 1971.

The Road Less Traveled also explores, for the first time, the modern qualities of Nason’s works. Driven throughout his career by a devotion to craftsmanship, technical mastery and realism, the printmaker built a lasting reputation as an artist working in a timeless style. But his tendency to produce sharp, precise, and stylized images also reflected the changing aesthetics of the modern era, an aspect of his work that has been overlooked until now. The prints featured in the exhibition emphasize the abstract elements evident in his smooth lines, simplified forms, and silhouetted compositions—traits that lend his works a surprisingly modern quality comparable to that of noted American Regionalists Grant Wood and Thomas Hart Benton.

Several images, like The Leaning Silo, 1932 or Milkweed Pod, 1954 owe their impressive depth to the multi-color process called chiaroscuro wood engraving. Summer Storm, 1940, represents the most complicated print in Nason’s oeuvre and is often considered his greatest achievement. “Chiaroscuros, the way I made them,” Nason wrote, “were the most difficult of anything I’ve done.” Made up of three separate blocks, and inked with four different colors, Nason calculated that he pulled the lever of his press at least 700 times in the creation of an edition of 90 prints. He created only 25 different chiaroscuro engravings over the course of his career. In all of his work, craftsmanship mattered to Nason above all else as he echoed in a 1966 essay: “It is better to be exquisite than to be ample.”

Along with prints from the Florence Griswold Museum’s own collection, which is the largest body of Nason prints and archival material, the exhibition features loans from a variety of institutions and private collections.

Special Programming - Join Amanda C. Burdan, curator of The Road Less Traveled: Thomas Nason’s Rural New England, for a gallery discussion entitled “Nothing Gold Can Stay: Conjuring the Past in Thomas Nason’s Prints of New England” on Sunday, January 18, at 2 PM. Burdan discusses her selections and explores the “modern” elements in prints seemingly filled with nostalgia for an idealized rural New England. The event is free with Museum admission. For additional information and a list of special programming, contact the Museum at 860/434-5542 or www.FlorenceGriswoldMuseum.org.










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