Youth

Cat. No. 418/IX

Youth

State/Variant:
State IX of X
Date:
1941-1944

Alternate Title:
Jeunesse (Youth); Le Liseur (The Reader); Liseur + auditeur (Reader + listener)
Themes
Architecture, Figures, Objects
Techniques
Aquatint, Etching
Support:
Paper
Dimensions:
plate: 5 × 7 1/2" (12.7 × 19.1 cm); sheet: 8 × 11 1/2" (20.3 × 29.2 cm)
Signature:
"L.Bourgeois" lower right margin, pencil.
Publisher
unpublished
Printer
Louise Bourgeois
Edition:
1 known impression of state IX
Edition Information:
Not issued as a published edition at any state.

Although there are 18 known impressions of the various states of "Youth," 3 have the following impression numbers: 5/7, 5/7, and 1/10.
Impression:
Not numbered
Curatorial Remarks:
Although aquatint is usually undertaken in print workshops with specialized equipment, Bourgeois used the technique at home. A loose sheet written by her in the 1940s includes notes on the steps and materials needed for making aquatints. (The Easton Foundation: LB-1833)

Additional known drawings relate to this composition but were not available for reproduction. They can be viewed on microfilm at the Archives of American Art, reel 90, frames 5 and 11.

The paper type could not be documented because this work is not in MoMA's Collection and could not be examined in person. The plate dimensions are from an impression in MoMA's Collection.
Description:
Soft ground etching, drypoint, and aquatint
Inscription:
"Youth" lower left margin, pencil, artist's hand.

The alternate titles are derived from the artist's inscriptions on known impressions of this composition. The alternate title, "Le Liseur," derives from an inscription on an impression of state VI that is not in MoMA's Collection and is not included in the Evolving Composition Diagram below.
State Changes and Additions:
Changes from state VIII, in drypoint: shading in some crosses increased; curl at back of neck on center figure further delineated.
Artist’s Remarks:
Though Bourgeois most often depicted daily activities during the 1940s, she occasionally introduced people from her earlier life. Here, Bourgeois said, are her father and her brother. "These are people I like... This is a family that is locked together, but totally isolated. They try to communicate, but they get nowhere." About the female figure she said: "She is desperate here because she listens, but perceives that she's not hearing. There is a difference between listening and hearing. It is the same today: not to hear and not to be heard. I am so preoccupied that I cannot hear, in spite of an enormous effort." About the female figure in the print, she added: "Maybe she is withdrawn because she doesn't have a child; she must be preoccupied with that." (Quotes cited in Wye, Deborah and Carol Smith. "The Prints of Louise Bourgeois." New York: The Museum of Modern Art, 1994, p. 56.)
© The Easton Foundation/VAGA at ARS, NY

Youth

1941-1944; reprinted 1990

Source

1941

Untitled

Source

1943

Untitled
States
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth
Youth

Related Works in the Catalogue

Dream
Pierre
Quarantania
Man Reading

Related Works in Other Mediums

Les Cheveux
Untitled
Untitled
Untitled