Arthur Negus Fuller (1879-1945) placed the figure in this autumnal scene walking towards a distant point lit up in yellow. The etching appears to have been hurriedly drawn, giving the appearance of foliage blowing in the wind. Arthur was the youngest son of George and Agnes (Higginson) Fuller of Deerfield, Massachusetts. In 1915, he purchased the Little Brown House and studio barn on Albany Road and that same year, he began printing monotypes. In 1919, he bought a printing press with his brother, Henry, for their shared Boston studio, and in 1920, they bought a second press for their studio at the Little Brown House. Arthur’s first intaglio etchings date from this time. His earliest intaglio, or colored, etchings were printed with a single pass through the press. Fuller accomplished this by first inking the lines on the copper plate, wiping off the excess, then lightly daubing ink where he wanted color, using the tip of a twisted cloth. Consequently, each intaglio print in an edition is slightly different from the next.
Fuller, Arthur Negus. The Wood Road. ca. 1925. Pocumtuck Valley Memorial Association, American Centuries. https://americancenturies.org/collection/1996-18-501/. Accessed on December 25, 2024.
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