Printmaking

jgcahoon 18,572 views 66 slides May 01, 2012
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About This Presentation

Authored by fellow teacher Tricia Barry for use in a collaborative Art I printmaking assignment.


Slide Content

Printmaking
•The art of stamping
•Purpose = making multiples of the same
image
Printmaking

Printmaking
1.Purpose 1.Make multiple
copies of an original

Types of Printing Processes:
Silkscreen
Lithography
Intaglio/Etching
Monotype
Relief

Printmaking
1.Purpose
4.Types
1.Make multiple
copies of an original

2. Silkscreen
Lithography Intaglio/
etching Monotype
Relief

Silkscreen
Images made by forcing ink through silk
stretched on a wooden frame
•Stencil or block-out image using fluid
•Apply ink to areas were no fluid was used
•Squeegee ink through screen onto
fabric/paper/clothing

Printmaking
2. Types
3. Silkscreen
3. Images made by
forcing ink through
silk stretched on a
wooden frame

2. Silkscreen
Lithography Intaglio/
etching Monotype
Relief

Lithography
Images made by printing on the surface of the
stone or surface
•A greasy (oil-based) crayon is applied to a smooth
block of limestone.
–The stone is ground down, acid is applied to clean it,
water is sponged onto the stone and oil-based ink is
rolled on.
•Ink will only stick to the crayon but not the water.
•Paper is placed on top and a large press applies
pressure to transfer the ink.

Printmaking
3. Silkscreen
4. Lithography
3. Images made by
forcing ink through
silk stretched on a
wooden frame

4. Images made by
printing on the surface
of the stone or surface

Intaglio
Images made by printing from the lower
surface
•Lines are cut or etched into a smooth plate of
metal
•Ink is rubbed into the grooves and the surface
is wiped clean
•Damp paper is forced into the inked grooves by
heavy printing press

Printmaking
4. Lithography
5. Intaglio/Etching 5. Images made by
printing from the
lower surface

4. Images made by
printing on the surface
of the stone or surface

Image made by painting on a smooth,
non-absorbent surface one time
• An image is painted
•The paper is pressed onto the image,
transferring it.
•The unique aspect of a monotype is that
the plate can never be replicated.
Monotype Printing

Printmaking
5. Intaglio/Etching
6. Monotype
5. Images made by
printing from the
lower surface

6. Image made
by painting on a smooth,
non-absorbent surface
one time

Relief Printing
Images made by printing from a raised
surface
• The lowered area does not print – stays the
color of the paper.
One color ink
• Examples – woodcuts, linoleum cuts, found
objects, fingerprints

Printmaking
6. Monotype
7. Relief 7. Images made by
printing from a raised
surface

6. Image made
by painting on a smooth,
non-absorbent surface
one time

Reduction Printing
•Relief printing using more
than one color
–Every time a color is printed,
that particular color will be
carved away, reducing the
block down and eliminating
that color in order to print a
different color

Printmaking
7. Relief
8. Reduction
Printing
9. Tools
7. Images made by
printing from a raised
surface

8. Relief printing using
more than one color

Video
•https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KETwb4MLKVI&safety_mode=true&persist_safety_mode=1&safe=active&IP=158.123.179.240&CAT=EXP1&USER=IPGROUP&CE=0
•http://videos.howstuffworks.com/howstuffworks/54-how-money-is-made-video.htm

Tools for Block Printing
Brayer
Carving tool
Barren
Ink
Ink plate/bench hook
Block

Block
 the surface that has an image to be
printed- wood, linoleum or vinyl

Linoleum & Carving Tool

Ink Plate/Bench hook
•Used for holding your linoleum in place to
carve & for rolling out ink

Brayer
 a roller for transferring ink to
the ink plate for printing

Barron
 4 ½ inch circular tool used for
pressing paper onto a plate or block
for hand printing.

Ink

Who thought of this??
•An artist named Jennifer Schmitt from Massachusetts
•One day she laid out all her prints on the floor on
afternoon and though “Gee, they look like the periodic
table."
•A friend dared her to do the project
•She posted her idea on Etsy and BarenForum.org (a
group for printmakers, primarily woodcut artists), and it
spread from there...
•IT MAY NOT BE TOO MUCH OF A COINCIDENCE:
The artist's mother was a high school chemistry teacher

Jennifer Schmitt with the Periodic Table of
Printmaking, on display in Elemental Matters

Jennifer Schmitt
“This visual interpretation makes it easier to
remember information about the elements,
gives you a story or a tidbit or fact to hang
onto. I know far more about a lot elements
now than I did a year ago or in 10th
grade.”

•97 printmakers produced 118 prints in a combo of; woodcut,
linocut, monotype, etching, lithograph, silkscreen.
•7 countries - Australia, Canada, England, Italy, Japan,
Scotland, United States
•29 US states & Puerto Rico from the US - Arkansas,
California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia,
Hawaii, Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Maryland,
Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Montana,
New Hampshire, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina,
North Dakota, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Puerto Rico,
South Carolina, Texas, Virginia, Washington, and
Wisconsin.
The Periodic table of Elements -
promoting both science and art

VirginiaLana Lambert30 Zinc Zn
New Jersey Kate Hutchison29 Copper Cu
United Kingdom Christa Demetriou28 Nickel Ni
ScotlandAine Scannell 27 Cobalt Co
ConnecticutAmy Arledge26 Iron Fe
TexasMarissa Buschow25 Manganese Mn
ConnecticutKate Nydam 24 Chromium Cr
South Carolina John H. May 23 Vanadium V
CaliforniaEllen Shipley22 Titanium Ti
United Kingdom Camilla Stacy 21 Scandium Sc
MichiganMarian Short20 Calcium Ca
New York Perla Pequeño19 Potassium K
CanadaSandra Tatsuko Kadowaki 18 Argon Ar
MassachusettsAnnie Bissett17 Chlorine Cl
New York Tara Shedlosky16 Sulfur S
TexasMichelle Arnold 15 Phosphorus P
PennsylvaniaTiberiu Chelcea 14 Silicon Si
North Dakota Ellen Brooks 13 Aluminum Al
CanadaSandra Tatsuko Kadowaki 12 Magnesium Mg
WashingtonConnie Pierson 11 Sodium Na
New York Stacy Rodriguez 10 Neon Ne
New Jersey/Hawaii Caren Loebel-Fried 9 Fluorine F
ConnecticutMari-Claire Vaccaro 8 Oxygen O
Puerto Rico Diane Cutter 7 Nitrogen N
CaliforniaKris Shanks 6 Carbon C
OregonMiles Histand 5 Boron B
MinnesotaKrista Stout 4 Beryllium Be
MassachusettsMarissa Swinghammer3 Lithium Li
MassachusettsJennifer Schmitt2 Helium He
OhioNathan Cannon1 Hydrogen H
LocationArtistElement

A little background..
•Dmitri Mendeleev published the
first periodic table in 1869. He showed that
when the elements were ordered
according to atomic weight, a pattern
resulted where similar properties for
elements recurred periodically. Based on
the work of physicist Henry Moseley, the
periodic table was reorganized on the
basis of increasing atomic number rather
than on atomic weight.

Artist: Natalia Moroz
•Darmstadtium is the synthetic chemical element, a superheavy
metal, of atomic number 110. The first atom of the heaviest
chemical element was detected in Darmstadt, Germany in
1994. It decays after a small fraction of a thousandth of a
second into lighter elements by emitting alpha-particles which
are the nuclei of helium atoms.
Reading about Darmstadtium I instantly imagined its
superheavy atom lifted by an old-fashioned circus weightlifter.
He is struggling under the weight while looking expectantly at
his wristwatch: the weight is supposed to lighten any
millisecond now.