Print and Printmaking Terms - The Bare Basics
Printmaking
terminology is a vast subject upon which books are written. Here, however,
we want to provide you with the bare basics for getting started, whether
in printmaking or collecting. Printmakers, print dealers, and print
collectors use six terms that are necessary for the comprehension of
prints: Edition, Numbering, Artist's Proofs, Restrike, States, and
Catalogue Raisonné.Edition
The number of images printed from the
plate, stone, block, or the like is called an edition. These identical
images are pulled either by the artist or, under the artists supervision,
by the printer. The body of the edition is numbered (for example, 1/100
through 10/100) directly on the print, usually in pencil. Additional
proofs, such as artist's proofs, are also part of the edition.
Numbering
Numbering indicates the size of the
edition and the number of each particular print. Therefore, 25/75 means
that the print is the 25th impression from an edition of 75. Beware of
numbering which comes in other forms, such as Roman numerals, as this
would tend to indicate a restrike.
Artist's Proofs
Artist's proofs are those
impressions from an edition that are specifically intended for the
artist's own use. These impressions are in addition to the numbered
edition and are so noted in pencil as artist proof or A/P. The legitimate
number of artist's proofs for a given edition us usually around 10% of the
total.
Restrike
A subsequent printing from an
original plate, stone, or block is called a restrike. Restrikes are
usually printed posthumously or without the artist's authorization.
States
Once the artist has drawn an image, he
or she may pull several prints. If the artist subsequently changes the
image, the first prints are called first state, and the subsequent prints
with the change, second state. The artist can continue to make changes,
with the number of states going as high as ten or more. These state proofs
are, for demanding collectors, objects of desire.
Catalogue Raisonné
A scholarly reference text
in which each print known to have been executed by a particular artist is
completely documented and described. The information given may include
title, alternate titles, date, medium, size of the edition, image size,
paper used, and other pertinent facts. The term is also used for similar
catalogs of paintings, sculptures, drawings, watercolors, or other works
by a single artist or workshop.
The catalogue
raisonné is the principal resource in the fight against big-time print
fraud. All of the most famous, most expensive printmakers have their
catalogue raisonné, and any print which does not figure there is
necessarily of dubious legitimacy. |