The exhibition poster is an Oliphant rendering of the six as faces on Mount Rushmore.
Among them is the image on the exhibition poster, of identical twin girls photographed in Roselle, 1967.
For sale (for $20 each) are hand-bound exhibition catalogues and limited-edition exhibition posters with calligraphy done by hand.
The exhibition included a series of McDiarmid's drawings and collage works; he also designed the exhibition poster.
The display will remain through July 4, and exhibition posters signed by Jerry Pinkney are on sale in the museum shop for $25.
He gained international recognition in 1974 with a special show at the Photokina trade show for which he also designed the official exhibition poster.
These could be designed so that A2 versions could be sold through our retail outlets to visitors (in a similar way to exhibition posters) thus recovering a major part of the production and printing costs.
The combination was used for covers of novels, advertisements, and exhibition posters.
Most of his woodcuts, (apart from exhibition posters, which he also printed himself directly from the woodblock) were printed on washi, which in English is erroneously translated into "rice paper"
In 1995 he created the art for the "Yugo Next"[1] exhibition poster at New York's Grand Central Terminal.