Gerry Mulligan is a woodengraving from 19894 by American painter and printmaker, James Gilbert Todd. It is pencil signed, titled, dated, and editioned 5/50. Gerry Mulligan was printed by the artist on ivory Kitakata wove paper and the image measures 8-1/4 x 5-1/2 inches. This woodengraving is illustrated on page 79 in Jazz Icons: Wood Engravings, Wood Cuts, and Paintings by James Gilbert Todd.
Gerry Mulligan (1927-1996) was one of the most widely respected and admired jazz musicians in our time. He was an American jazz saxophonist, clarinetist, composer and arranger. He wrote about his music: “There are some words that have been lost from modern usage that I like to bring to my music and have striven all my life to do, BEAUTY, GRACE, NOBILITY, these are the things that music an bring to us as human beings. I think it is well that we who make music keep that in our consciousness.”
James Gilbert Todd, painter, printmaker, illustrator, and educator, was born in Minneapolis, Minnesota on 12 October 1937. Todd attended the College of Great Falls, Montana from 1956 to 1959, and then continued his studies at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago and the University of Chicago. He received his MFA in painting and printmaking in 1970 from the University of Montana. Todd taught in Western Germany between 1965 and 1968, but returned to Montana where was Professor of Humanities at the University of Montana from 1971-80, and then Professor of Art from 1980-2000 when he retired. He has lived over forty years in Missoula, Montana in the Northwest Rocky Mountains.
Todd is a member of the Association Jean Chieze in France, the Wood Engravers Network in the United States, the Society of Wood Engravers and the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers in the United Kingdom. He illustrated the books, A Radiant Map of the World by Rick Newby, Still Another Day by Pablo Neruda, and Woman Who Lives in the Earth by Swain Wolfe. His work is in the collections of the Montana Museum of Art and Culture; the Montana Historical Society; the Jiangsu Provincial Fine Arts Museum in China; the Honolulu Academy of Fine Arts; the Oaxaca Museum in Mexico; the Regensburg Museum, Germany; and the Ashmolean Museum in Oxford, England.