During the early 1960s Yves Gaucher’s imagery was quasi representational; the shapes in prints like Asagao resemble rough flat stones, sometimes layered. He made prints using multiple irregular plates so that the individual forms were self-contained and palpably textured. The absence of plate marks precludes interpreting the paper surface as anything other than itself. There is little in these early prints to hint at the geometry soon to come.
Yves Gaucher: Montreal Abstraction Finds an Edge
-
Yves Gaucher, Asagao, 1961
Etching and embossed copper printed on laminated papers, 48.4 x 33.4 cm, Musée d’art contemporain de Montréal