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9780252069840 Academic Inspection Copy

The Lincoln Image

ABRAHAM LINCOLN AND THE POPULAR PRINT
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The Lincoln Image documents how popular prints helped make Lincoln's a household face, deliberately crafting the image of a man of the people, someone with whom an ordinary American could identify. Featuring the work of Currier and Ives, John Sartain, and other artists and printmakers, this lavishly illustrated volume pairs original photographs and paintings with the prints made from them. That juxtaposition shows how printmakers reworked the original images to refine Lincoln's appearance. In several prints, his image replaces those of earlier politicians (the nineteenth-century equivalent of being ''airbrushed in''); in others, a beard has been added to images that originally appeared clean-shaven.Focusing on prints produced in Lincoln's lifetime and in the iconographically important months immediately following his death, The Lincoln Image also includes wartime cartoons, Lincoln family portraits (most of which appeared after the assassination), and renderings of the fateful moment of the shooting at Ford's Theatre. In addition to discussing the prints themselves, prominent Lincoln scholars Harold Holzer, Gabor S. Boritt, and Mark E. Neely Jr. examine the political environment of the nineteenth century that sustained a market for political prints, showing how politics offered spectacle, ritual, and amusement to a nation without organized sports and with only a rudimentary entertainment industry.A fascinating examination of the relationship between Lincoln's image, the printmakers' craft, and the political culture that helped shape them both, The Lincoln Image documents how printmakers both chronicled and shaped Lincoln's transfiguration into an American icon.
''An intriguing assemblage of Lincoln's many looks; wild Republican; family man; angry prophet; sagacious dreamer.'' Todd Crespi, Los Angeles Times ''Absorbing and entertaining.'' The New Yorker ''[An] important contribution to the history of American prints as well as to the study of Lincoln ... a feast for both eye and mind.'' Choice ''An exquisite archival picture book.'' Kenneth R. Clark, Chicago Tribune
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