Pasture Lot , ca. 1940
7.1 x 9.1 in (h x w)
Lithograph on wove paper; collection of Ora Hatton Shay

The locale depicted in Pasture Lot and the circumstances of the print’s creation are unknown. Unlike other printmaking techniques, lithography requires the services and expertise of a printer
well-versed in the technical complexities of the process. During the first half of the twentieth century, skilled lithographic printers were in relatively short supply, and artists often had to travel great distances to work with a printer or send their lithographic stones to a printer by rail. One possibility is that Hatton created Pasture Lot with Francis Chapin, an instructor of lithography at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she studied during the summer of 1932. Other lithographic printers to whom Hatton would have had access in the 1930s and 1940s include Lawrence Barrett at the Broadmoor Academy in Colorado Springs and William Dickerson at the School of the Wichita Art Association in the artist’s native Kansas.

Plus de Gregory Allicar Museum of Art

Hirakawa bashi [Hirakawa Bridge] , 1929
16 x 11 in (h x w)
Color woodcut on paper; Gregory Allicar Museum of Art, CSU, gift of Editha Todd Leonard, 1983.1.77
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Grand Canyon , 1925
10.5 x 15.8 in (h x w)
Color woodcut on paper; Gregory Allicar Museum of Art, CSU, gift of Editha Todd Leonard, 1983.1.65
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Untitled (tea harvesting in Shizuoka) , 1929
13.3 x 16.5 in (h x w)
Color woodcut on paper; Gregory Allicar Museum of Art, CSU, gift of Editha Todd Leonard, 1983.1.93
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Amache, Japanese-American Concentration Camp, Colorado, July 29, 1994 / A-1-10-1 , 1994
10.3 x 12.8 in (h x w)
Chromogenic Print
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Dali's Inferno , 1978
29.5 x 21.4 in (h x w)
Lithograph on paper; Gregory Allicar Museum of Art, CSU, gift of Joseph F. Lombardi/Franken Company, 1982.2.4
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art