Popular Graphic Arts
![see caption below](images/awh06c50.jpg)
The life & age of woman. Kelloggs & Comstock. Between 1848 and 1850. Prints and Photographs Division. LC-USZC4-3651. bibliographic record |
During the nineteenth century the marketing of popular prints to adorn the walls of middle-class homes flourished. The Currier
and Ives firm, for instance, advertised its wares under the slogan “Works of art to brighten the home within the reach of
all.” In its Popular Graphic Arts (PGA) Collection (12,000 prints, ca. 1750-1930), the division has a substantial body of these types of prints, mostly acquired through copyright
deposit.
Currier and Ives prints, as well as lithographs and chromolithography by other prominent firms such as Prang and Strobridge
are prolifically represented in the collection; samples of the products of a wide array of lesser known publishers can also
be found. Ranging in subject matter from genre scenes of everyday life and portraits of celebrities of the day to religious
iconography, the prints comment on women's dress and gender roles. Many idealize women in their roles as wives and mothers
or as decorative “objects.” Although many of the prints were designed for home decoration, quite a few appear to have been
intended for advertising purposes. Like product labels, they can reveal how women's
images were incorporated into the marketing of products and ideas.
Searching the Collection
![see caption below](images/awh06c51.jpg)
A beautiful pair. Currier & Ives. Copyright 1872. Prints and Photographs Division. LC-USZC2-1995. bibliographic record |
Most of the prints can be searched in the Prints and Photographs Online Catalog where the collection has its own listing.
Digitized images accompany some records.
To look for images for which no online record exists, onsite researchers can consult the following:
- Popular Graphic Arts card catalogs — prints are listed by publisher or printer, sometimes with the size, color, and names
of individuals or companies associated with the production of the print indicated.
- Graphics File — provides broad subject access to a substantial selection of the prints (as well as other non-photographic
materials in the collection—see the description of the Graphics File in Using the Collections). The prints are represented by photocopies.
Go to the Prints and Photographs Online Catalog (PPOC)
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