Arizona Adobe

Date circa 1910
Technique Monotype
Price $1,250.00
Exhibitor The Annex Galleries
Contact the Exhibitor 707.546.7352
artannex@aol.com
Buy From / See At This Exhibitor's Site


Arizona Adobe is a color monotype created around 1910 by the American artist William Seltzer Rice. This unique impression, which is pencil  signed and titled, was printed by the artist on fine Japanese paper tipped onto an ivory support sheet. The image measures 4-15/16 by 3-7/8 inches.

William Selzer Rice is primarily known for his extraordinary color woodcuts but he also experimented in many media including etching, drypoint, sandpaper drypoint, linocut, lithography, watercolor and monotype. Arizona Adobe is probably based upon a photograph that Rice took during his 1907 trip to the desert where he visited sites which are now within the boundaries of Arizona and New Mexico. Rice painted his image onto a printing matrix and his brushstrokes are clearly evident. The technique combined with the smaller format makes the scene seem very intimate.

William Seltzer Rice, painter, printmaker, educator, and author, was born to Sarah Graeff Seltzer and John Maurer Rice on 23 June 1873 in Manheim, Pennsylvania. He moved to Philadelphia in the fall of 1892 to attend the Pennsylvania School of Industrial Art and was awarded a three-year scholarship to the school the following year. In June 1894, Rice received a Certificate in Industrial Drawings and the following June he received a Certificate in Decorative Painting and Applied Design.

After graduating in 1895, Rice was hired as staff artist for the Philadelphia Times but continued taking classes with Howard Pyle at the Drexel Institute. In August 1900, Rice moved to California and his friend Frederick H. Meyer offered him a job as Assistant Art Supervisor in the Stockton Public Schools. Rice taught for thirty years in the Alameda and Oakland public schools and, in 1929, he received his BFA degree from the California College of Arts and Crafts. That same year he published his book, Block Printing in the Schools.

Rice was a member of the Print Makers Society of California, the California Society of Etchers, the Prairie Printmakers, the Northwest Printmakers, and the San Francisco Art Association. He exhibited with the California Water Color Society, the Association of American Etchers, the Print Club of Philadelphia, and the Wichita Art Association. His work is represented in the collections of the Boston Public Library and the Museum of Fine Arts Boston, Massachusetts; the Indianapolis Museum of Art, Indiana; the Herbert F. Johnson Museum of Art, Ithaca, New York; the Monterey Museum of Art, California; the New York Public Library, New York; the Oakland Museum of California; the Crocker Art Museum, Sacramento, California; the Fine Arts Museums of  San Francisco, California; the Library of Congress, the National Gallery of Art, and the Smithsonian American Art Museum, Washington, D.C.; the Wichita Art Museum, Kansas; and the Worcester Art Museum, Massachusetts.

William Seltzer Rice died at his home in Oakland, California on 27 August 1963.