
Ethel Shipton American, b. 1963
Which Way to Go: Alamo, 2021
Archival print on Hahnemuhle paper
48 x 36 in
121.9 x 91.4 cm
121.9 x 91.4 cm
Edition of 10
Ethel Shipton's print series, Which Way To Go (2021), encompasses her ability to combine everyday observations with considerations of the linguistic conditionality and narrative created through text. Based on photos...
Ethel Shipton's print series, Which Way To Go (2021), encompasses her ability to combine everyday observations with considerations of the linguistic conditionality and narrative created through text. Based on photos of exit signs on the highway, Which Way to Go gives relevance to the small Texas towns at each mark, emphasizing the significance of local and regional communities by calling attention to places in Texas that are often overlooked. Her focus on signage observed along Texas roadways is an ongoing project that began in 2014. By transforming the photographs into monochromatic prints, Shipton places the graphic quality of the setting and elements of the built environment at the forefront of the composition.
Exhibitions
Los Dos Laredos Y Más, Laredo Center for the Arts, Laredo, TX, 2022Publications
Exhibition Catalogue, Ethel Shipton: Outer Boundaries, Ruiz-Healy Art, San Antonio, TX, in collaboration with the McNay Art Museum, San Antonio, TX, Ruby City, San Antonio, TX, the San Antonio Museum of Art, San Antonio, TX, the Laredo Center of the Arts, Laredo, TX, and El Museo del Barrio, New York, NY 2022, pg. 24 (illustrated)