The Lamson Library Print Series was established in August, 2006 by the Library Director, David A. Beronä. Our mission is to bring contemporary printmakers whose work display a focus on a contemporary theme or social issue that provokes critical thinking among our faculty and students. Each visiting printmaker is responsible for hanging their work on our exhibit wall, interact with students and the public during the opening event, and give a presentation on their theme and technique for a printmaking class in the Art Department, which is also open to the public.
Exhibitions 09-10
Two Rivers Printmaking Studio: Portfolio 2008
- October 26 to January 29
Exhibitions 08-09
American Politics 2008 : A View in Prints
- September 15 to November 21, 2008
- Opening Event Wednesday, September 17
Exhibitions 07-08
Penelope Bennett: The Artist as Witness
- February 6 – May 16, 2007
- Opening Event February 6, 2007 4 - 6 p.m.
Kurt Brian Webb: War—Dance of Death in Black, White and Blood Red All Over
- September 12 – December 20, 2007
- Opening Event September 12, 2007 4 - 6 p.m.
Previous Exhibitions
Pictorial Illusion: The Graphic Art of Rachel Gross
- January 31 — March 16, 2007
- Opening Event January 31, 2007 4-6 p.m.
Art Hazelwood: Hubris Corpulentus
- October 18 — December 16, 2006
- Opening Event October 18, 2006 4-6 p.m.
Japanese Manga: A Glimpse of the Classics
- September 5 — October 6, 2006.
- Opening Event September 13, 2006 4-6 p.m.
- Gallery Talk September 20 at noon with curator David A. Beronä, Lamson Library Director and guest on New Hampshire Public Radio’s ‘Front Porch’, The Culture of Manga in the US (Aug. 30, 2006).



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[...] Opening Event: Wednesday, September 17, 4-6 p.m. Printmakers from New Hampshire, Maine, and Vermont present works in collaboration with the Art of Democracy, which is a national coalition of political art exhibitions all taking place in the Fall of 2008 on the State of the American Political Scene. National exhibits and images may be viewed at: http://www.artofdemocracy.org and selected works from this exhibit are presented at: on the Lamson Library Web site. [...]