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Sunday, August 31, 2025 |
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Brand X Editions: Innovation in Screenprinting opens at the Philadelphia Museum of Art |
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Rashid Johnson, Untitled Large Mosaic, 2019 Screenprint, framed: 40 x 30 inches (101.6 x 76.2 cm), Gift of Brand X Editions, New York, 2023, x22005(5)
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PHILADELPHIA, PA.- The Philadelphia Museum of Art announces Brand X Editions: Innovation in Screenprinting, the first exhibition to spotlight four decades of collaborations between the Brand X printmaking workshop and a diverse roster of contemporary artists. On view through November 16, 2025, the exhibition features more than 80 screenprints by Helen Frankenthaler, Rashid Johnson, Alex Katz, Tschabalala Self, and Mickalene Thomas, among many others.
The exhibition celebrates the transformative gift of the Brand X Editions Archive to the PMA, presenting a selection from the over 400 screenprints given by master printer and founder Robert Blanton. Since establishing the workshop in 1979, Blanton and his team of skilled printers, chromists, and specialists have worked in collaboration with an impressive list of artists to push screenprinting techniques to meet the artists varied styles and expressive ambitions. The body of work from Brooklyn-based Brand X builds significantly on the museums extensive holdings of historical screenprints, adding major contemporary examples of traditional and experimental techniques. The PMA now holds one of the most comprehensive collections of screenprints along with essential archives related to the mediums history and evolution from commercial tool to vibrant fine-art technique.
It is an honor to be the chosen home for Brand Xs magnificent collection of prints, said Sasha Suda, the George D. Widener Director and CEO of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. As expert printmakers, internationally renowned for their craft, Brand X are the true leaders in this field. For a museum like the Philadelphia Museum of Art, with such a rich and dedicated history in printmaking, it is a privilege for us to have this opportunity to welcome our visitors to experience and enjoy this generous gift.
On view throughout the galleries are the results of Brand Xs dynamic collaborations across four decades of work. Together, the prints reveal the remarkable versatility of screenprinting. In the first gallery, for instance, works by Rashid Johnson, Deborah Kass, Adam Pendleton, and Mickalene Thomas demonstrate the mediums ability to mimic the richness of paint layers, render a photographic precision, and produce variegated textures and surfaces. These artists expand the technical boundaries of screenprint in their exploration of themes relating to belonging, memory, and self-definition. From the dense, painterly urgency of Johnsons Untitled Anxious Red to the layered intricacy of Mickalene Thomass November 1977, each work here shows how, at the Brand X workshop, screenprinting can be stretched, challenged, and transformed in response to an artists creative impulses.
The exhibition also addresses themes relating to text and language, pattern and decoration, graphic illusion, and landscape and figuration. Eight progressive proofs of Vija Celminss Ocean Surface offer a rare view onto the screenprinting process. From print to print, visitors can see how the image was formed cumulativelyby the sequential printing of individual screens, each bearing a single layer of ink. In final form, Celminss image materializes through sixteen applications of nuanced graysan additive and subtle process apt for rendering the depth and detail of the ocean. Throughout the exhibition, equal emphasis is given to the pictorial and the material. Brand X Editions shines light on the technical procedures and the many rolesbeyond that of the artistthat are vital to the production of screenprints.
Just like the work that happens at Brand X, this exhibition and its catalogue were thoroughly collaborative endeavors, said Louis Marchesano, curator of the exhibition and the Marion Boulton Kippy Stroud Deputy Director of Curatorial Affairs and Conservation. The addition of the Brand X Editions Archive, which will continue to grow as the studio produces more editions, goes a long way toward building an authoritative resource on screenprinting at the museum.
Extending the exhibition beyond the gallery space, Rashid Johnsons Untitled (Large Mosaic), 2025, is displayed in the PMAs Forum Balcony. For over three years, Johnson and his collaborators at Brand X developed this spectacular 293-color print, combining traditional screenprinting techniquesvisible in the flat passages of bold colorwith unconventional materials, including wood veneer, mirrored mylar, and cast paper oyster shells. Inspired by Johnsons low-relief wall mosaics composed of innumerable tile fragments and other bits of material, this project captures Brand Xs enduring commitment to pursuing new levels of technical innovation and experimentation.
Brand X Editions: Innovation in Screenprinting is accompanied by a richly illustrated catalogue featuring essays by PMA curators and paper conservators, an interview with Robert Blanton and David DeSanctis of Brand X, a technical glossary related to the history and technique of screenprint, and an inventory of the archive held by PMA.
The exhibition is curated by Louis Marchesano, the Marion Boulton Kippy Stroud Deputy Director of Cultural Affairs and Conservation, with Em Dombrovskaya, the Suzanne Andrée Curatorial Fellow; Laurel Garber, the Park Family Associate Curator of Prints and Drawings; and Emily Friedman, the Allen and Kelli Questrom Assistant Curator of Prints and Drawings at the Dallas Museum of Art.
A series of exhibitions by Brand X collaborators including Rashid Johnson and Joel Mesler will be shown at the PMA through 2028.
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