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Grant Wood March

Recent Sales

Grant Wood Original Stone Lithograph, 1941, "March"
By Grant Wood 1
Located in Phoenix, AZ
Grant Wood original stone lithograph in excellent condition. 9" H x 11.88" W image size
Category

Mid-20th Century American Prints

Materials

Paper

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Grant Wood March For Sale on 1stDibs

At 1stDibs, there are many versions of the ideal grant wood march for your home. Each grant wood march for sale was constructed with extraordinary care, often using paper, wood and metal. Your living room may not be complete without a grant wood march — find older editions for sale from the 19th Century and newer versions made as recently as the 21st Century. A grant wood march made by mid-century modern designers — as well as those associated with Baroque — is very popular. Albert Chubac, Robert Beauchamp and Daniel Douke each produced at least one beautiful grant wood march that is worth considering.

How Much is a Grant Wood March?

A grant wood march can differ in price owing to various characteristics — the average selling price 1stDibs is $19,477, while the lowest priced sells for $298 and the highest can go for as much as $59,850.

Grant Wood 1 for sale on 1stDibs

Grant Wood is Iowa’s most famous artist and his painting, American Gothic, is one of America’s most famous paintings. Wood was born on a farm but moved to Cedar Rapids when he was 10 years old after the death of his father. From then on, Wood lived most of his life in Cedar Rapids or Iowa City, dying of cancer the day before his 51st birthday. During the Great Depression, few artists could afford travel costs to study in Europe and consequently, the Regionalist movement arose at an opportune time. Wood became the spokesman for the Regionalist painting movement of the 1930s when he famously remarked that he got all his best ideas for painting while milking a cow.

Finding the Right Prints for You

Prints are works of art produced in multiple editions. Though several copies of a specific artwork can exist, collectors consider antique and vintage prints originals when they have been manually created by the artist or are “impressions” that are part of the artist’s intent for the work.

Modern artists use a range of printmaking techniques to produce different types of prints such as relief, intaglio and planographic. Relief prints are created by cutting away a printing surface to leave only a design. Ink or paint is applied to the raised parts of the surface, and it is used to stamp or press the design onto paper or another surface. Relief prints include woodcuts, linocuts and engravings.

Intaglio prints are the opposite of relief prints in that they are incised into the printing surface. The artist cuts the design into a block, plate or other material and then coats it with ink before wiping off the surface and transferring the design to paper through tremendous pressure. Intaglio prints have plate marks showing the impression of the original block or plate as it was pressed onto the paper.

Artists create planographic prints by drawing a design on a stone or metal plate using a grease crayon. The plate is washed with water, then ink is spread over the plate and it adheres to the grease markings. The image is then stamped on paper to make prints.

All of these printmaking methods have an intricate process, although each can usually transfer only one color of ink. Artists use separate plates or blocks for multiple colors, and together these create one finished work of art.

Find prints ranging from the 18th- and 19th-century bird illustrations by J.C. Sepp to mid-century modern prints, as well as numerous other antique and vintage prints at 1stDibs. Browse the collection today and read about how to arrange wall art in your space.