Title: MONOPRINT meaning one print
1MONOPRINTmeaning one print
-
- American artists began making monotypes during
the 1880s in Europe and the United States. In
Italy Frank Duveneck and the artists in his
circle created them on a portable press for their
own amusement and taught the process to other
artists when they returned to the United States.
Artists studying in Paris also began making
monotypes as a group activity, experimenting with
the process in conjunction with their drawing or
printmaking activity. None of them adopted it as
a primary medium. Monotypes were made in a spirit
of improvisation, a release from the restrictions
of academic training.
2- Spontaneity and experimentation have always
characterized the monotype. In contrast to other
printmaking techniques, an artist does not need
special equipment or technical training to make a
monotype. - In its purest and simplest form, a monotype is
made by drawing with printer's ink or oil paint
on a smooth surface such as glass or a metal
plate. - The image is then transferred to paper before it
dries, using a printing press or other means of
pressure, ranging from the back of a spoon to a
palm of the hand, or even the wringer of an old
washing machine. - Because most of the image is transferred in the
printing process, only one strong impression can
be taken, hence the term monotype (one print). - Additional impressions of the residual image are
sometimes printed, but they are significantly
fainter than the first pull. These are referred
to as aghost print.
3Untitled (Group in Water)Eric Fischl, 1992color
monotype, 91.4 x 185.7 cm(36 x 73 1/8 in.),
Smithsonian American Art Museum
4Edwin DickinsonJoyce Treiman, 1987color
monotype with hand coloring and pencil additions,
(7 x 5 in.), Private Collection
5UntitledJoseph Jefferson, ca. 1885color
monotype, 35.7 x 50.7 cm(14 1/16 x 20 in.),
Smithsonian American Art Museum, Museum purchase
and gift of the Reverend Dewolf Perry
6NarcissusJoseph Goldyne, 1978color monotype,
44.9 x 30.2 cm(17 11/16 x 11 7/8 in.), Private
Collection
7 - The Pony,
- Paul Gauguin c. 1902 - sheet 32 x 59 cm
gouache monotype touched with gum - or varnish on laid paper
8Edgar Degas The Star, 1876-77, pastel on
monotype, Musée d'Orsay, Paris.
9Camille Pissarro Vacherie le soir, c. 1890
Monotype in warm black on woven paper sheet
10- Createx Monotype Colors are unique water-based,
non-toxic, permanent paints crafted specifically
for making monotypes. - Simply paint on any non-absorbent surface (i.e.
Plexiglas) and allow to dry. - Transfer your image to dampened paper by rubbing,
printing pin, or press. - This unique water-based process allow unlimited
time to create the image, unlike oil-based inks
which must be printed before dried. - Known as the most painterly method among the
printmaking techniques, a monoprint is a non
editionable kind of print and is essentially a
printed painting.