DC:ART: Addison/Ripley Fine Art presents: Lou Stovall, opening reception Saturday, December 11. 2010

Lou Stovall No Editions: Painterly Prints
Addison/Ripley Fine Art
Summer Songs, 2010, silkscreen mono print, 20 x 40 1/8 inches
Summer Songs, 2010, silkscreen mono print, 20 x 40 1/8 inches
LOU STOVALL
NO EDITION: PAINTERLY PRINTS
December 11, 2010 – January 22, 2011

Please join us for an opening reception
Saturday, December 11, 5 – 7 pm

Addison/Ripley Fine Art is especially pleased to present this exhibit of recent unique silkscreens by Lou Stovall, "No Editions: Painterly Prints", works that display the full range of the artist’s extraordinary imagination and technical accomplishment. These works show Stovall as a true heir to the groundbreaking work of the Washington Color School and a ceaseless innovator in his own right. As indicated in the title, these are one of a kind prints, skillfully layered, dazzlingly rich in color.

Lou Stovall was born in Athens, Georgia in 1937 and grew up in Springfield, Massachusetts. He studied at the Rhode Island School of Design and at Howard University (B.F.A.). Since 1962, he has lived and worked in Washington, DC. His drawings and silkscreen prints have brought him grants from the National Endowment for the Arts and the Stern Family Fund.

Under his direction, Workshop, Inc. has grown from a small but active studio primarily concerned with community posters into a professional printmaking facility. Stovall’s craft is that of a master printmaker but his passion is drawing. His own prints and drawings are part of numerous public and private collections throughout the world. Through Workshop, Inc., founded in 1968, he has made a unique effort to build a community of artists in Washington, DC and to encourage, by his own example, service in the community.

Along with his own work, recognition as a master printmaker has gained him commissions to print works of such noted artists as Josef Albers, Peter Blume, Alexander Calder, Elizabeth Catlett, Gene Davis, David Driskell, Sam Gilliam, Lois Mailou Jones, Jacob Lawrence, Robert Mangold, Mathieu Mategot, A. Brockie Stevenson and James L. Wells.

Among his special commissions he designed the Independence Day invitation for the White House in 1982 at the request of Mrs. Ronald Reagan. In 1986, at the request of Mayor Marion Barry, he made the print American Beauty Rose for the Washington, DC Area Host Committee 1988 Democratic National Convention. In 1996 he designed and made the print Breathing Hope to honor Howard University’s incoming president H. Patrick Swygert.