In the beginning, before the printing press, printmaking was not considered
an art form, rather a medium of communication. It was not till the 18th
century that art prints began to be considered originals and not till the
19th that artists began to produce limited editions and to sign their prints
along with the technical information necessary to authenticate the work.
Engraving goes back to cave
art, executed on stones, bones and cave walls. The duplication of engraved
images goes back some 3,000 years to the Sumerians who engraved designs on
stone cylinder seals. Academics think that the Chinese produced a
primitive form of print, the rubbing, as far back as the 2nd century AD.
The Japanese made the first authenticated prints, wood-block rubbings of
of Bhddhist charms, in the late-middle eighth century.
Esperanza Romero
Printmaking in Europe
European printmaking began with textile printing as early as the sixth
century, while printing on paper had to wait a bit longer for the arrival of
paper technology from the Far East. The first paper produced in Europe was
in Játiva in Spain in 1151. The first woodcuts printed on paper were playing
cards produced in Germany at the beginning of the 15th century. It was only
slightly before this that the first royal seals and stamps appeared in the
England of Henry VI.
Printing from a metal engraving was
introduced a few decades after the woodcut, and greatly refined the results.
Restricted at first to goldsmiths and armorers, it soon became the most
popular form of serial reproduction. The earliest dated printed engraving is
a German print dated 1446, "The Flagellation," and it was in Germany that
early intaglio printing developed before passing to Italy (Mantegna,
Raimondi, Ghisi) and the Low Countries (Lucas van Leyden, Goltzius, Claesz,
Matsys). From makers of playing cards the metal engraving technique passed
to artists where it probably reached its apex in the hands of Albrecht Dürer
in the 16th century. Dürer represented a watershed in the history of
printmaking, and, since he travelled to Italy, his influence was felt there
in a direct way.
The Seventeenth Century
The seventeenth century saw a flowering of ornamental and portrait work all
over Europe, with Rubens and Van Dyck leading the way in Flanders. By this
time most intaglio work was acid etched, as contemporary artists considered
this a less commercial, more creative, nobler technique. Though Italy was a
hotbed of etching, ironically the leading etchers there were foreigners:
Jaques Callot and Claude Lorrain from France and the Spaniard, José de la
Ribera. The leading figure in the Netherlands at this time was, of course,
Rembrandt, who left to posterity a monumental benchmark both in terms of
quantity and quality. His approximately 300 plates represent virtually every
aspect of human endeavor.
Europe's printmaking center of gravity moved
to Italy in the 18th century, beginning with Tiepolo who, it is said,
exercised a significant influence on Goya. Then came Canaletto, the
chronicler of Venice and Piranesi, allegedly the most important
architectural printmaker of all time with some 3,000 large arquitectural
etchings. The tradition of distinguished English printmaking dates only from
Hogarth in the 18th century, but he was quickly followed by the satirical
Rowlandson and then William Blake, the crown jewel among British
printmakers. Blake's contemporary in Spain was Francisco Goya, who stretched
the limits of printmaking to new heights and depths.

Gudrun Ewert
The Nineteenth Century
The nineteenth-century saw printmaking follow the same turbulent trail as
the rest of the visual arts. In France the active printmakers at this time
included Ingres, Delacroix, the Barbizon School (Daubigny, Theodore Rousseau
and Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot) and the political satirist Honoré Daumier,
who made more than 4,000 lithographs, mainly for newspaper illustrations.
The most important printmakers among the Impressionists were Manet and
Degas, the former mainly in lithographs.
Though we have barely touched upon Japanese
printmaking here, special mention must be made of the master of woodcut,
Katsushika Hokusai, who in the last half of the 17th century and the first
half of the 18th produced some 35,000 drawings and prints, many of them
recognized masterpieces, many of which were to exert an important influences
on European printmakers.
Nineteenth century English printmaking
highlights an Englishman, Francis Seymour Hayden, and an American, James
McNeil Whistler. The other notable American printmaker at this time, though
more in terms of natural science than art, was James Audubon.

Maureen Booth
Enter Picasso
Printmaking, like everything else in the art world, exploded in the first
half of the 20th century. First and foremost was Pablo Picasso, the Spanish
lad from Málaga who made more than 1,000 prints including etchings,
engravings, drypoints, woodcuts, lithographs and lino cuts. Picasso almost
single handedly returned printmaking's center of gravity to France. Then
came Braque, Matisse, Rouault, Chagal, Joan Miró, Max Ernst, Jan Arp,
Salvador Dalí and others. In Germany it was the time of the Expressionists,
Emil Nolde, Max Beckmann (who taught in the U.S.A. after the Second World
War), George Grosz, Ernst Barlach, Erich Heckel, Oskar Kokoschka and others.
Hot on the heels of Expressionism in Germany came the Bauhaus, where artists
like Kandinsky and Paul Klee produced seminal work.
In England Henry Moore, besides
working in sculpture, also created a powerful series of lithographs, and
Graham Sutherland did noteworthy work as well, along with Anthony Gross. In
the United States in the 20th century the tradition of distinguished
printmakers includes George Wesley Bellows in lithography, John Sloan and
Reginald Marsh in etching and Milton Avery in drypoint. But perhaps the most
noteworthy of American painter/printmakers of this period are Edward Hopper
with his excellent and highly personal work and Ben Shahn, who excelled in a
variety of print media. |