October 6, 2025

Charles L. Marshall, Sr.

         Charles Leroy Marshall, Sr (USA, 1905-1992) hailed from Kansas.  Today I’ve got a cache of small linoleum block prints all made within a few years around 1929-1933.  I have actually shared one of Marshall’s pieces before at my post “Let There Be Light,” but that was hardly a representative example.  Today I’ve got a pleasing collection of scenes, all with a focus on architecture.
        I’m starting with a greeting card from 1931, partly because it might be my favorite, and partly to mention this orange ink.  Marshall seems to have printed many if not most of his pieces in both black versions and orange versions.  I have no idea whether he just really liked orange, or whether he got a great deal on orange ink cheap, or what.  It’s an unusual choice and I generally prefer the black versions, but I did want to include one in orange just to show you.  As for the subject, I’m a sucker for little, magical-looking towns in scenic locations.
        Next is the City Hall of Albany, NY, which I like for its spare composition and its gorgeous bare-branched trees.  I love the balance of having very little detail, but it’s exactly enough to express the scene.  I admire this style in part because I’m not very good at it.  In my own work I have no confidence about deciding what to include and what to leave out.
        The construction scene is certainly busier.  It reminds me of Mike Mulligan and His Steam Shovel, which was published not too much later than this piece, in 1939.
        The next two pieces have, by contrast, more of a look of loneliness or solitude.  Lighthouses often tend to be isolated, and I like the way Marshall’s sky emphasizes the lands-end openness of the location.  The border of dark sky at the top also balances the dark land low in the picture.  The lighthouse is not the kind that’s usually considered picturesque, but its framework makes an interesting geometric pattern in silhouette against that spacious sky.
        Finally, here’s a “Construction Camp” that also emphasizes a wide sky, but this sky seems heavy.  Perhaps it’s just the grey paper, but it gives me almost a gothic vibe of hunkering down beneath a windswept drizzle.  I’d expect a construction camp to be busy, but this one looks deserted - perhaps everyone’s elsewhere, hard at work.  I also like the choices of cutting strokes that make up the hillside below the buildings, and the power line that ties them all together.
        All of these pieces are quite small, generally in the neighborhood of 3x4 or 4x5, and I like how much they express with their relatively simple lines and shapes.  Since they’re all from such a brief period in the artist’s life I now want to see whether I can find out what Marshall did later.
        And what are your feelings about orange ink?


[Pictures: Untitled holiday card, linocut by Charles Leroy Marshall Sr., 1931;

Albany City Hall, linocut by Marshall, ca. 1932;

Untitled (construction), linocut by Marshall, ca. 1932;

Light House at Marblehead, linocut by Marshall, 1929;

Construction Camp, linocut by Marshall, ca. 1933 (All images from Marianna Kistler Beach Museum of Art).]

1 comment:

Charlotte (MotherOwl) said...

It reminds me of some of the cut by M.C.Escher.
I don't greatly care for orange ink but now and then it can be refreshing with unusual colours.