1. Search reference books that list or index exhibition catalogs, such as the following:
2. Search WorldCat or any library online catalog, using a subject search, for the artist's name or art medium and "exhibitions," "auction," or "catalog"
3. Search article databases that index newspapers or journals from the appropriate time period, looking for announcements or reviews of exhibitions for the artist. If the article or review gives a title for the exhibition, search it in WorldCat to see whether a catalog was published.
Image Credit: Gustav Stickley. 1909-1912. Sideboard. Furniture. Yale University Art Gallery. http://artgallery.yale.edu/, Gift of Dr. and Mrs. Matthew Newman. https://library.artstor.org/asset/AYALEARTIG_10312577940.
A catalogue raisonné is a comprehensive, annotated listing of all the known artworks by an artist either in a particular medium or all media. The two databases listed here are a great first step in finding a catalogue raisonné for a graphic artist or a fine artist.
Use WorldCat and/or highly respected art library catalogs (such as the Met, the Getty, the National Gallery, or the Art Discovery Group Catalogue. In many cases, works may be cataloged with the subject heading catalogues raisonnés, and any search of WorldCat or a library catalog could start there.
Please note: Not all publications of an artist's oeuvre will be called a catalogue raisonné, and not all will have the catalogues raisonnés subject heading. Try searching (by title) for such terms as complete works (or complete paintings, drawings, graphic work, etc), oeuvre complete, oeuvre catalogue, or corpus. In the case of contemporary artists try looking for exhibition catalogs, which often make attempts to list an artist's works and exhibition history as well as a bibliography of reviews, articles, and other publications.