Escher’s first solo exhibition was held in the United States, in the Whyte Gallery in Washington, in October and November 1954. It was an initiative of the American Charles Alldredge, who had become a fan and collector after reading articles about Escher in magazines Time and Life in 1951. The two started corresponding and Alldredge went on to become something of a manager of Escher’s interests in the US.
‘I am very happy about a fat cheque I received from Washington. It pays off everything my art dealer owed me and means I can do more business with him. The sale of exactly 150 prints since my first foray into the US market is a nice result, and has earned me a total of $2,215. Without a doubt, I owe it all to the as yet unsurpassed Alldredge, with whom my correspondence continues. He sometimes tells me all sorts of things about his work and personal life. He earns his living (a decent living, from what I hear) by writing the speeches that his powerful “boss”, Senator Kefauver, is increasingly having to give now he is a candidate for the presidency. He is from the same party as Stevenson, so actually more or less anti-Eisenhower. I doubt Kefauver stands a good chance, but as Alldredge wrote to me: “if we succeed, then your prints will be hanging in the White House”.’