Printmaking

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Revision as of 06:29, 14 November 2007 by imported>Ramon Markus Kadi
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The term printmaking refers to the use of a variety of media to create multiple or multiple images. With the advance of digital printing it is hard to imagine for some that at some points in life all printed matters, both images and letters, were produced by hand. Early 15th century Europe, for example, saw the proliferation of books and manuscripts, whose existence owed to hand-illustrations and hand-lettering. Au contraire, the newspapers, magazines, and tabloids one finds in a bookstore are all done through mechanical printing known as offset lithography.

In Printmaking, a finished original print is achieved through successive impressions made through contact with an inked or uninked stone, woodblock, plate, or screen. This original print is to be different from printed reproductions of artwork that exists in other media such as painting and drawing. For example, in many souvenir and gift shops at museums and galleries around the world, one may find a Picasso print of Les Demoiselles d'Avignon, which originally exists as a painting; this, however, does not constitute an original print, but it is not to say that Picasso himself did not produce an original print. Au contraire, his original prints such as etchings and lithographs could be found in museums and galleries, and in auction houses such as Sotheby's and Christie's.

Printmaking consists of four basic processes: 1. Planographic (Lithography) 2. Relief (Woodcut and Wood Engraving) 3. Intaglio (Etching and Engraving) 4. Stencil (Serigraphy or Screen Printing).

Planographic

Relief

Intaglio

Stencil