Contemporary experimentation
- Key People:
- Julie Mehretu
- Rembrandt
- William Blake
- Pablo Picasso
- Edgar Degas
- Related Topics:
- stenciling
- rubbing
- monotype
- cliché-verre
- relief printing
One of the most crucial changes in the 20th century involved the size of the print. All through its history, with few exceptions, the print was considered an intimate art form, enjoyed by the few. The change started with the Lautrec posters: the print started to grow until it became mural size. As the dimensions of the print changed, so did its character. It became increasingly bolder and more colourful. Today, the print often competes with painting, a situation deplored by many people who feel that in the process the print is losing its particular character and beauty. For a time, major print shows tended to exhibit only a limited number of small, delicate prints, but two more recent developments seem to be balancing that trend. One is the reappearance of the intimate, introspective, black-and-white print. The other is the revival of the long-neglected woodcut, due particularly to the interest of the Postmodernist artists in German Expressionism.
Next to the size of the print, the greatest change has been in the technology of colour printing. In this area, techniques have become so varied that practically any effect is possible. This development has contributed to the vitality of printmaking, because it has encouraged the participation of colour-oriented artists. The combining of various media is closely related to the experimentation in colour printing. Each medium has its own capabilities and limitations; combined, the media often complement each other. It is now common to see three or four different techniques combined.
Another area of experimentation is in three-dimensional surfaces. The trend started with embossing, and today artists are creating completely three-dimensional printed objects.
The shaped print is a printed paper sculpture, made by cutting and folding the printed paper or by assembling precut printed surfaces. Many of these surfaces are metal or plastic objects with printing, usually done by the silk-screen process.
Instead of using rectangular painting surfaces, many painters now work on shaped canvases. In the same way, printmakers, instead of using rectangular plates, are using many different shapes. Printing with movable plates, which became particularly popular in intaglio colour printing and with colour woodcuts, is the logical extension of this freedom. In this method small cutout plates are placed on top of larger plates and printed together, or they are assembled on a cardboard support and printed. This procedure facilitates the use of many colours and also offers great freedom in composing.
Photography is profoundly affecting printmaking. Photographic methods can be combined with intaglio, lithography, or silk screen to enrich their vocabulary. The possibilities are nearly limitless. Yet photography can be corrupting when it reintroduces reproductive ideas, and, unfortunately, it is often used for this effect.
Kinetic (moving) art, such as the mobile, is a major contemporary preoccupation in painting and sculpture. At present there are few attempts in this direction in printmaking, but there will probably be more. The problem in such works is how to combine the print with motion without destroying its very nature.
Mounting and care of prints
Very few people know how to display prints and how to take care of them properly. It is heartbreaking to see a great master’s print glued to a cheap cardboard or the border of a fine print ruined with tape.
Because paper, particularly old paper, is fragile, it should be handled as little as possible and never picked up with one hand since this might put too much stress on the paper and tear it. To protect it, a print should be mounted as soon as possible.
The surface of the print, especially an intaglio print, is delicate, and rubbing might permanently injure it. Prints should not be stacked without protective layers of tissue paper between them. Wood-pulp papers should not be used, as the acid content in these can burn the print. A print should not be exposed to intense sunlight; this is true particularly of colour prints, for very few colours are stable enough to withstand long exposure to direct sun. Light can also affect the paper. Because wood-pulp board contains chemicals that in time can burn or discolour the paper, a permanent mat should be constructed out of pure rag board. A properly constructed mat consists of two parts: the backing board to support the print and the covering frame to display it. The width of the mat frame should be related to the print’s dimensions so that the mat does not overpower the image. The window size of the mat should never obscure the printed image itself, or the signature and edition number.
Because temperature changes in a damp climate can cause condensation and the print can develop fungi, prints should be kept from direct contact with the glass. The simplest protection is a deep enough pure rag mat. If this is not sufficient, a filler should be inserted into the frame to increase the space between the mat and the glass.
The backboard of the frame should be also rag board, or at least faced with rag paper, although the latter is not the perfect solution. The back of the frame should be sealed with tape to prevent the penetrating of dust. In damp climates it is advisable to keep the frame away from the wall by placing corks on its four corners. This facilitates the free circulation of air. Air-conditioning and humidity controls are the best protection.