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Total Categories: 6
Nathaniel Currier founded the company, and James Merritt Ives was added as a partner in 1857.
Answer: True
Nathaniel Currier established the firm, and James Merritt Ives joined as a partner in 1857, leading to the company being known as Currier and Ives.
Nathaniel Currier's early life, marked by the early death of his father, did not significantly influence his career path.
Answer: False
Nathaniel Currier's father died when he was young, necessitating his early contribution to family support. This responsibility likely fostered the dedication that led to his lifelong career in printmaking, beginning with his apprenticeship at age fifteen.
Nathaniel Currier received his initial lithography training in Philadelphia.
Answer: False
Nathaniel Currier began his career by apprenticing in the lithography shop of William and John Pendleton in Boston, not Philadelphia.
The 1835 lithograph depicting a New York City fire was a minor success and did not impact Currier's business strategy.
Answer: False
The 1835 lithograph depicting the Merchant's Exchange fire was a significant success, demonstrating the market potential for prints based on current events and influencing Currier's shift towards topical publishing.
Currier and Ives's business initially focused on job printing before shifting to independent print publishing after successful disaster prints.
Answer: True
Nathaniel Currier's firm initially engaged in job printing. The success of prints depicting contemporary events, such as fires and disasters, prompted a strategic shift towards independent print publishing.
James Merritt Ives initially worked as an artist for the firm before becoming a partner.
Answer: False
James Merritt Ives began his tenure with the firm as the bookkeeper and later became general manager, contributing significantly to business operations before becoming a partner.
The success of the 'Awful Conflagration of the Steam Boat Lexington' lithograph led to the firm receiving a weekly insert in the *New York Sun*.
Answer: True
The significant success of the 'Awful Conflagration of the Steam Boat Lexington' lithograph in 1840 was so impactful that it resulted in Currier's firm being granted a weekly insert in the *New York Sun* newspaper.
James Merritt Ives primarily contributed by managing the artistic direction and selecting subjects for lithographs.
Answer: False
James Merritt Ives's primary contributions were in modernizing business operations, including bookkeeping and inventory management, and streamlining production processes, rather than managing artistic direction.
When did the company officially become known as 'Currier and Ives'?
Answer: 1857, with the addition of James Merritt Ives as a partner.
The company officially adopted the name 'Currier and Ives' in 1857 when James Merritt Ives became a full partner alongside Nathaniel Currier.
What early career experience significantly shaped Nathaniel Currier's dedication?
Answer: Being required to help support his family from a young age after his father's death.
Nathaniel Currier's father died when he was young, requiring him to contribute to family support. This early responsibility likely fostered the dedication that led to his lifelong career in printmaking.
Where did Nathaniel Currier gain his initial training in lithography?
Answer: In Boston, at the Pendleton brothers' shop.
Nathaniel Currier commenced his lithography training through an apprenticeship at the Pendleton brothers' shop in Boston.
What was the business impact of the 1835 lithograph depicting a New York City fire?
Answer: It demonstrated the significant market potential for prints based on current events.
The success of the 1835 lithograph illustrating a New York City fire proved the substantial market demand for prints depicting contemporary news events, influencing Currier's business strategy.
How did James Merritt Ives initially join the company and what was his key contribution?
Answer: He started as the bookkeeper, modernized operations, and became a partner.
James Merritt Ives began as the company's bookkeeper, significantly modernizing operations and streamlining production before becoming a partner, contributing vital business acumen.
What role did James Merritt Ives play in streamlining the business operations?
Answer: He modernized bookkeeping, reorganized inventory, and streamlined the production.
James Merritt Ives was instrumental in modernizing the company's business operations, including implementing improved bookkeeping methods, reorganizing inventory, and streamlining the overall production process.
Currier and Ives was primarily a business focused on selling expensive, original oil paintings.
Answer: False
The firm Currier and Ives specialized in creating and selling inexpensive, hand-painted lithographic prints, not expensive original oil paintings.
Currier and Ives aimed to produce exclusive, high-priced prints for art collectors.
Answer: False
The firm's explicit business model was to produce 'cheap and popular prints,' targeting a broad audience rather than exclusive, high-priced art collectors.
Currier and Ives published fewer than 5,000 different lithographs during their operation.
Answer: False
Currier and Ives published at least 7,500 distinct lithographs during their 72 years of operation, exceeding the stated number.
Currier and Ives prints were generally expensive, with larger works costing upwards of $10.
Answer: False
Currier and Ives prints were intentionally affordable; larger works typically ranged from $1 to $3, aligning with their strategy of producing 'cheap and popular prints'.
The advertising slogan 'the Grand Central Depot for Cheap and Popular Prints' suggested a focus on niche, high-art markets.
Answer: False
The advertising slogan 'the Grand Central Depot for Cheap and Popular Prints' explicitly indicated a strategy focused on reaching a broad consumer base with affordable and widely appealing artwork, rather than targeting niche, high-art markets.
What was the primary business activity of Nathaniel Currier and later Currier and Ives?
Answer: Creating and selling inexpensive, hand-painted lithographic prints.
Currier and Ives specialized in the creation and sale of inexpensive, hand-painted lithographic prints, operating as a prominent printmaking business from 1835 to 1907.
The firm Currier and Ives described its business model and products using which phrase?
Answer: Publishers of Cheap and Popular Prints
The firm explicitly advertised itself as 'Publishers of Cheap and Popular Prints,' reflecting its strategy to produce affordable and widely accessible lithographic works.
Approximately how many distinct lithographs did Currier and Ives publish in total?
Answer: At least 7,500
During their 72 years of operation, Currier and Ives published a substantial volume, with estimates indicating at least 7,500 distinct lithographs.
What was the price range for the larger Currier and Ives prints?
Answer: $1.00 to $3.00
Larger prints produced by Currier and Ives were affordably priced, typically ranging from $1.00 to $3.00, consistent with their business model.
How did the Currier and Ives firm advertise its market strategy?
Answer: As 'the Grand Central Depot for Cheap and Popular Prints.'
The firm's advertising slogan, 'the Grand Central Depot for Cheap and Popular Prints,' clearly communicated its strategy of providing affordable and widely appealing artwork to the general public.
What does the phrase 'Publishers of Cheap and Popular Prints' reveal about Currier and Ives's target market?
Answer: They intended to reach a broad audience with affordable and appealing artwork.
The phrase 'Publishers of Cheap and Popular Prints' clearly indicates that Currier and Ives aimed to serve a wide audience by offering affordable and widely appealing artwork, rather than catering to exclusive or specialized markets.
The total number of prints produced by the firm exceeded two million.
Answer: False
The firm produced more than one million prints through hand-colored lithography, but the statement that it exceeded two million is not supported by the provided information.
The lithographs were created by printing pre-made color plates, eliminating the need for hand-coloring.
Answer: False
The lithographs were initially printed in black and white and subsequently hand-colored by a team of women, rather than being produced using pre-made color plates that eliminated hand-coloring.
The women coloring the prints were paid a fixed weekly salary regardless of the number of prints completed.
Answer: False
The women who hand-colored the prints were compensated based on output, typically receiving approximately $6 for every 100 colored prints, not a fixed weekly salary.
Currier and Ives exclusively used the black-and-white printing method throughout their entire operational history.
Answer: False
While prints were initially pulled in black and white before hand-coloring, the firm also evolved to produce full-color lithographs as techniques advanced, thus not exclusively using black-and-white printing.
The Spruce Street location housed all aspects of the Currier and Ives operation, including stone grinding and printing presses.
Answer: True
The firm's premises at 33 Spruce Street were organized across multiple floors, accommodating various functions including stone grinding, artistic work, and the operation of printing presses.
Distribution of Currier and Ives prints was limited to New York City bookstores.
Answer: False
Distribution was extensive, reaching beyond New York City through pushcart vendors, peddlers, national bookstores, and even international outlets, indicating a wide market reach.
The lithographic stones required minimal preparation time, often ready for drawing within a day.
Answer: False
The preparation of lithographic stones was a time-consuming process, often requiring over a week before they were ready for drawing, contrary to the notion of minimal preparation time.
Paper used by Currier and Ives remained consistent, always being a pure cotton-based material.
Answer: False
The paper composition was not consistent; while early prints used cotton-based paper, the firm transitioned around 1870 to paper that included a mixture of cotton and wood pulp.
How were the Currier and Ives prints typically colored?
Answer: By hand-coloring done by a team of women.
The prints were typically colored by hand by a dedicated team of women, often working in an assembly-line fashion, applying watercolor washes to the black-and-white lithographs.
What was the approximate payment for women who hand-colored the prints?
Answer: $6 per hundred prints
The women employed for hand-coloring the prints were compensated at a rate of approximately $6 for every 100 prints they completed.
How did Currier and Ives distribute their prints to reach a wide audience?
Answer: Through pushcart vendors, peddlers, bookstores, and international outlets.
Currier and Ives employed a broad distribution strategy, utilizing pushcart vendors, peddlers, bookstores nationwide, and international agents to ensure wide accessibility of their prints.
What was the approximate total number of prints produced by the firm using hand-colored lithography?
Answer: Around 1 million
Through their hand-colored lithography process, the firm produced an estimated total exceeding one million prints.
Currier and Ives lithographs exclusively depicted historical events and landscapes.
Answer: False
Currier and Ives lithographs covered a wide array of subjects beyond historical events and landscapes, including scenes of daily life, popular culture, sports, and more.
Currier and Ives primarily used contemporary, unknown artists for their lithographs.
Answer: False
Currier and Ives frequently utilized the works of celebrated contemporary artists, including figures like James E. Buttersworth, George Inness, and Thomas Nast, rather than exclusively unknown artists.
Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait was renowned for his depictions of cityscapes, while George H. Durrie specialized in sporting scenes.
Answer: False
Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait was renowned for his sporting scenes, while George H. Durrie specialized in picturesque winter landscapes, not cityscapes or sporting scenes respectively.
Currier and Ives lithographs covered a narrow range of themes, focusing mainly on maritime subjects.
Answer: False
Currier and Ives lithographs encompassed an exceptionally broad range of themes, including landscapes, historical events, daily life, sports, and maritime subjects, far from a narrow focus.
Frances Flora Bond Palmer was the first woman in the United States to earn a living as a full-time artist.
Answer: True
Frances Flora Bond Palmer holds the distinction of being the first woman in the United States to establish a career and earn a living as a full-time artist.
George H. Durrie was primarily known for his depictions of bustling city scenes.
Answer: False
George H. Durrie was primarily recognized for his picturesque depictions of American winter scenes, not for bustling cityscapes.
Louis Maurer was known for his landscape paintings, contributing scenic views to the firm.
Answer: False
Louis Maurer was primarily known for his genre scenes, not landscape paintings, contributing works such as 'The Finish' and 'The American Fireman' to the firm's output.
The print 'Across the Continent' by Fanny Palmer achieved a significant auction price of over US$60,000 in 2019.
Answer: True
The Currier and Ives print 'Across the Continent,' created by Fanny Palmer, indeed achieved a significant auction price exceeding US$60,000 in 2019, underscoring the enduring value and collectibility of their works.
Which of the following was NOT a typical subject matter for Currier and Ives lithographs?
Answer: Portraits of European royalty and classical mythology.
Currier and Ives focused on subjects relevant to American life and culture, such as daily scenes, historical events, landscapes, and popular themes. Portraits of European royalty and classical mythology were not typical subjects.
Which of these artists was known for specializing in sporting scenes for Currier and Ives?
Answer: Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait
Arthur Fitzwilliam Tait was a prominent artist associated with Currier and Ives, particularly recognized for his dynamic depictions of sporting scenes.
Which of the following themes was NOT commonly depicted in Currier and Ives lithographs?
Answer: Scenes from ancient Roman history.
Currier and Ives focused on themes relevant to 19th-century American life and history. Scenes from ancient Roman history were not a common subject matter for their lithographs.
Which of the following artists was noted as being the first woman in the U.S. to make a living as a full-time artist?
Answer: Frances Flora Bond Palmer
Frances Flora Bond Palmer is recognized as the first woman in the United States to successfully establish and sustain a career as a full-time professional artist.
What specific type of scene was George H. Durrie known for providing to Currier and Ives?
Answer: Picturesque winter landscapes.
George H. Durrie was particularly celebrated for his contributions of picturesque winter landscapes, capturing the essence of American winters in his lithographs for the firm.
Which of the following artists was considered a 'star' of the firm and known for picturesque panoramas?
Answer: Frances Flora Bond Palmer
Frances Flora Bond Palmer was a highly regarded artist within the firm, celebrated for her picturesque panoramas of the American landscape and considered one of its 'stars'.
The Victorian public largely ignored Currier and Ives prints, finding them unsuitable for home decoration.
Answer: False
The Victorian public widely embraced Currier and Ives prints, considering them popular and suitable home decorations that reflected contemporary tastes and sentiments.
The 'Darktown Comics' series by Currier and Ives was celebrated for its positive and respectful portrayal of African Americans.
Answer: False
The 'Darktown Comics' series was inherently racist, depicting African Americans in demeaning and mocking ways, and was not celebrated for positive or respectful portrayals.
Despite their racist nature, the 'Darktown Comics' were commercially unsuccessful for Currier and Ives.
Answer: False
Contrary to the assertion, the 'Darktown Comics' series was highly commercially successful, consistently ranking among the firm's bestsellers.
Catharine Esther Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe believed home pictures should strictly follow academic artistic standards.
Answer: False
Catharine Esther Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe emphasized that the value of home pictures resided in their sentiment and their capacity to express the household's genuine tastes, rather than adhering to strict academic artistic standards.
A Currier and Ives lithograph depicted John Brown as Christ on his way to execution in 1859.
Answer: True
A notable Currier and Ives lithograph from 1859 portrayed John Brown in a Christ-like manner, en route to his execution, with symbolic elements such as the Virginia motto 'Sic semper tyrannis'.
The 'Darktown Comics' series, while racist, provided valuable insight into 19th-century American stereotypes.
Answer: True
The 'Darktown Comics' series, despite its deeply problematic and racist content, inadvertently serves as a historical 'pictorial record' reflecting the prevalent, albeit negative, stereotypes and societal values of 19th-century America.
According to Catharine Esther Beecher and Harriet Beecher Stowe, what was the primary value of pictures in the home?
Answer: Their reflection of the household's genuine tastes and sentiment.
Beecher and Stowe posited that the principal value of pictures in the home lay in their capacity to express the household's genuine tastes and sentiments, rather than conforming to external artistic standards or displaying wealth.
The rise of offset printing and photoengraving contributed to the decline and eventual liquidation of the Currier and Ives firm.
Answer: True
The advent and increasing prevalence of newer printing technologies such as offset printing and photoengraving rendered the traditional lithographic methods of Currier and Ives less competitive, contributing to their eventual decline and liquidation.
All Currier and Ives lithographic stones were destroyed or lost after the firm's liquidation.
Answer: False
While most lithographic stones were destroyed or repurposed, a few significant examples, such as those depicting Clipper Ships and 'Darktown Comics,' survived intact.
Collectors can identify original Currier and Ives prints by examining the paper type and standard folio sizes.
Answer: True
Collectors utilize characteristics such as the specific type of inking, paper composition, and standard folio sizes as key indicators for identifying original Currier and Ives prints.
Currier and Ives prints are no longer popular and are rarely used for decoration or collectibles today.
Answer: False
Currier and Ives prints remain highly popular today, sought after by collectors and frequently used as decorations, with their winter scenes notably appearing on American Christmas cards.
What technological advancements eventually led to the decline of Currier and Ives's business model?
Answer: The development of offset printing and photoengraving.
The emergence and advancement of offset printing and photoengraving provided more efficient and cost-effective methods for image reproduction, contributing significantly to the obsolescence of Currier and Ives's traditional lithographic business model.
What happened to most of the lithographic stones after the firm was liquidated?
Answer: Their images were removed, and they were sold by the pound.
Following the firm's liquidation, the majority of the lithographic stones had their images ground off and were subsequently sold by weight, with some even ending up as landfill.
Which of the following is mentioned as a characteristic collectors use to identify original Currier and Ives prints?
Answer: The specific type of inking and paper composition.
Collectors employ various characteristics to authenticate original prints, including the specific type of inking, the composition of the paper (which evolved over time), and the standard folio sizes.
What was the fate of the few lithographic stones that survived intact after 1907?
Answer: They included specific large folio Clipper Ships and small folio Dark Town Comics.
The few lithographic stones that survived intact after the firm's liquidation in 1907 included specific examples such as large folio Clipper Ships, small folio Dark Town Comics, a medium folio 'Abraham Lincoln,' and a small folio 'Washington As A Mason.'
How are Currier and Ives prints primarily used today?
Answer: As popular decorations and sought-after collectibles.
Original Currier and Ives prints are highly valued by collectors, and reproductions remain popular for decorative purposes, demonstrating their enduring appeal.