Paulson Fontaine Press
Paulson Fontaine Press is a printmaking studio, gallery, and publisher of contemporary fine art prints in Berkeley, California. Many of their publications are etchings. More than half of their published editions have been produced with minority or female artists. In a 2011 interview, Pam Paulson stated: "We plan projects with emerging, mid-career, and blue-chip artists. We keep a balance."
History
In 1993, Pam Paulson, who had previously worked at Crown Point Press, began conducting workshops in intaglio printmaking and producing editions with local artists from an 800 square-foot studio in Emeryville, California. In 1996, she and Renee Bott co-founded Paulson Press, moving to a larger studio space in Emeryville. Their first publications were Chris Brown's "Train Series" prints; these quickly sold out, providing capital for the business to begin extending invitations to artists from outside the Bay Area, starting with Radcliffe Bailey. In 1999, the press relocated to 9th Street in Berkeley, where they produced and exhibited prints by artists such as Brown and Deborah Oropallo. In 2009, they moved to their current location on 4th Street in Berkeley. In 2016, gallery director Rhea Fontaine became a partner and the press was renamed Paulson Fontaine Press. Fontaine is one of the first African-American women in history to publish fine art prints by contemporary artists.Prints from Paulson Fontaine Press are included in the collections of the Achenbach Foundation, the Anderson Collection, the Art Institute of Chicago, the Austin Museum of Art, Bank of America, the Berkeley Art Museum, the Birmingham Museum of Art, the Chazen Museum of Art, the Cleveland Museum of Art, the Crocker Art Museum, the De Saisset Museum, the Detroit Institute of Arts, Elgin Community College, Fidelity Investments, the de Young Museum, the Hallmark Collection, the High Museum of Art, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden, the Houston Museum of Fine Arts, JP Morgan Chase, the Kresge Art Museum, the Library of Congress, the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the McNay Art Museum, the Morgan Guaranty Trust Company, the Museum of Modern Art in New York, the Nancy and Joachim Bechtle Private Collection, the National Gallery of Art, the New York Public Library Schomburg Center, the Palmer Museum of Art, the Polk Museum of Art, the Progressive Corporation, the Saint Louis Art Museum, the San Jose Museum of Art, the Studio Museum in Harlem, the Baltimore Museum of Art, the Tubman African American Museum, the U.S. Department of State, the University of Michigan, the Walker Art Center, the Whitney Museum of American Art.
In 2015, the press's entire archive was acquired by the Fine Arts Museums of San Francisco; the archive, comprising nearly 500 prints by more than forty artists, is held at the Achenbach Foundation for Graphic Arts.
In 2018, the Pennsylvania Academy of the Fine Arts announced that it would become the sole East Coast repository for prints by African American artists from Paulson Fontaine Press.