William Charles McNulty (American, 1884-1963), The Bridges, c. 1930

William McNulty The Bridges Signed Etching
6C153562-C5E3-4787-9A70-DAA3CED5E383
William McNulty The Bridges Signed Etching
6C153562-C5E3-4787-9A70-DAA3CED5E383

William Charles McNulty (American, 1884-1963), The Bridges, c. 1930

$1,500.00

Etching on paper

6 1/2 x 12 1/4 inches, image

Signed lower right in pencil

Titled and inscribed lower left.

From an edition of 75

Good condition. Mild toning. Framed.

About: Works by McNulty are housed in the permanent collections of the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the New York Public Library, the Newark, Detroit and Whitney Museums, the U.S. Library of Congress and the University of Nebraska.

McNulty started as a newspaper artist in Nebraska and Montana, but wasn't content to stay there. In New York, he studied at the league between 1907 and 1909. After returning to the journalism field and going to New Orleans and Seattle, he took up printmaking under the encouragement of Joseph Pennell, founder of the graphic arts department at the Art Students League. He worked in the League and was exhibiting prints by 1927. He had prints included in the first International Exhibition of Etching organized by the Art Institute of Chicago in 1932, and the institute continued to display his work until 1946.

In 1931, he began teaching at the Art Students League, and taught until 1958.

McNulty had worked for newspapers around in Nebraska and Montana and in New Orleans and Seattle as an editorial cartoonist. Under the name Von-A he worked for the Seattle Star, and had illustrations printed in The Cartoon: A Reference Book of Seattle's Successful Men and the 12th Session of the Washington State Legislature. Both were vanity cartoon books, collaborations of Seattle area cartoonists from its big three newspapers, featuring the rich and powerful in caricature and newsroom editorial-style drawing. The two books represent work he did as a member of the Seattle Cartoonists' Club in 1911.

Etchings include: Fulton Market Docks (1935), Men Working on Dock (1930), New York from Stevens Institute (1935), and Woolworth Building New York(1929)

Source:
"William Charles McNulty," Wikipedia

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