Edward Warner | Wool c1937 | SOLD

 
Etching titled ‘Wool’  1937

Etching titled ‘Wool’ 1937

 

Wool c1937
32.5 x 50.5 cm
This work is signed in pencil on the lower right.

The watercolour taken from an etching completed in 1937 titled wool.
Watercolour and etching are sold together.

Etching details:
Wool 1937
Etching on paper
Plate mark 22 x 37.5 cm
Signed and dated in the plate
Signed in pencil in the lower margin
Edition of 50- proof number 5.
Price for the pair of works :
SOLD

 
 

 

Edward Warner 1879- 1968
BIO

Born in London on 27 May 1879, Alfred Edward Warner, ‘Teddy’ to friends, studied
printing and commercial art at a local Polytechnic college. He learnt the techniques
of stone lithography, woodcut printing, etching, airbrush techniques and scraperboard.
He ran his own commercial studio in London before travelling to Australia with his inlaws
in 1911. Finding employment opportunities difficult, he moved to Auckland, New
Zealand where he was Head of Job-printing at The Star. It was at this time he made
his first etchings.
Returning to Australia in about 1919, he worked as a commercial artist. Around 1922 he
once more began etching and exhibiting, earning a considerable reputation for his work.
In 1930 his daughter began to help in the studio preparing plates and printing, and in 1936
he was joined by his son, who printed many works. In the mid 1930s Alfred Warner and his
wife travelled in a caravan around NSW, Victoria and Queensland collecting material for his
Australia at Work series of prints.
In the late 1930s he produced a series of colour linocuts. Designed by Warner they were
cut by his daughter and printed by his son, hence the signature, ‘The Warners’.
During the depression years Warner also produced popular etchings under the pseudonyms
C. Jack, C. J. Dodd, Brueton, G. Marler and G. Martin. Some of these were printed in large
editions and he also made a range of unsigned cards. Warner also produced screenprints
towards the end of the 1930s, having taught himself from American magazines. He
specialised in producing photographic stencils and also sold screenprinting equipment that
he designed and made.
He does not seem to have made any etchings after 1938. Warner died in 1968.

Roger Butler Senior Curator, Australia Prints, Posters and Illustrated Books,
National Gallery of Australia 2009.