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Maker(s):Bolotin, Jay
Culture:American (1949-)
Title:Print VII Adam tills the Soil in Lower Eden: A Catalog Raisonné of the Objects, Flora & Fauna, Angel Detritus, Characters & Architectural elements of Eden and Nobotown Elements of a Woodcut Motion Picture Titled "The Jackleg Testament: part one - Jack and Eve"
Date Made:2005-2007
Type:Print
Materials:woodcut printed in black with handcoloring and handwritten text in ink on moderately thick white Rives BFK paper
Place Made:United States
Measurements:sheet: 19 13/16 in x 25 3/4 in; 50.32375 cm x 65.405 cm
Narrative Inscription:  inscribed in ink at lower left: 12/35 VII, initialed and dated at lower right: JB 2007
Accession Number:  SC 2008.60.1.7
Credit Line:Purchased with the Carol Ramsay Chandler Fund and with the fund in honor of Charles Chetham
Museum Collection:  Smith College Museum of Art
2008_60_1_7.jpg

Description:
naked man with clock at feet, hoeing in a field with two heads, floating hand, birds, red sun and cloud in sky, tree to right edge, landscape, crops, flowers

Label Text:
A portfolio of 40 black and white woodcut prints with notations and a woodcut motion picture.

The Jackleg Testament Part I: Jack and Eve is a one-of-a-kind motion picture derived from the crisply styled woodcuts of Kentucky-born Jay Bolotin. The film reinterprets the story of Adam and Eve as a dark, provocative tale in which Eve is lured from the Garden of Eden by a Jack-in-the-Box. Presiding over the story is Nobodaddy, a mischievous, unforgiving creator, named after William Blake's term for God within the old testament. Bolotin's world is meticulously and vividly realized, an evocative hybrid of German expressionism, Brueghel and medieval religious imagery. An operatic score and soundtrack, composed by Bolotin, propels the film throughout, featuring the voices of the great English tenor Nigel Robson, Wagnerian bass Monte Jaffe, Karin Bergquist, lead singer of the bad Over-the-Rhine, and Bolotin himself. The script, also written by the artist, is rich in literary echoes, from Shakespeare to Kafka, and often darkly funny.

Link to share this object record:
https://museums.fivecolleges.edu/detail.php?t=objects&type=ext&id_number=SC+2008.60.1.7

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