Pressure + Ink: Lithography Process
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- Опубликовано: 4 май 2011
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Produced in conjunction with the exhibition German Expressionism: The Graphic Impulse.
Find out more at moma.org/germanexpressionism
Special thanks to Phil Sanders, Director and Master Printer, Robert Blackburn Printmaking Workshop. A program of The Elizabeth Foundation for the Arts. Created by Plowshares Media PlowsharesMedia.com
© 2011 The Museum of Modern Art, New York
#art #moma #museum #modernart #nyc #education #artist #expressionism #expressionist #germanexpressionism
SO many steps, difficult to believe this was invented to make prints easier!
can't get enough of this clip. awesome! it's like a lovechild of chemistry and art.
I'm kinda curious to see how the hell the process was even conceived to this modern way.
lithography is a printmaking method that has been largely replaced by aluminum plates. It used to be the premiere choice of printing for many types of marketing. Once the stone plate has an image, that plate can produce many, many more identical prints than a wood block, which will wear down over time. I saw a set of circus posters done on plates over 50 years after they were made - looked like color laser prints. Once photographic technology arrived, lithography processes altered dramatically.
how on earth did they work this out..??!....trial and error..?
I just purchased my first stone lithography art and I did not know until I reached home and searched for the artist and his biography. It was from a boutique in Lund, Sweden that is about to close. I was looking for modern art to decorate my house and the purchased item catches my eyes. I know it was a fine work of art and I had a bargain. Actually, it turned out to be a Bruno Bruni’s art.
Low key this is like asmr to me
i am wrting a test tommorow about this. Helped me alot, even though i am learning this in Greek.
This has been a genuinely entertaining video, it kept me smiling all the way through.
Wow, what a good and instructive video. I just love to see artists working like that. Pure art!
This is incredible. I never knew there was so much to this method.
Thanks for such a clear, easy to understand video about lithography!
awesome... I have searched and searched the internet to find a good example of lithography. Thanks !!
This makes me appreciate MC Escher even more
Thank you. Clear and concise to give a first idea about the process. Motivating to emulate in this craft. I would like to know more now and explore the more modern way of transferring images onto the stone. Such as with the negative of a photography. And also to use other support for the etching than lime stone.
Lovely demonstrations! !!
Thank you that was very interesting, my father always talked about litho printing but never explained the detail.
Printing images to paper and be able to reproduce that printing over and over again without losing quality, before modern printing tech this was the only way to reliably make large numbers of similar printings like posters, newspapers, magazines etc.
someday I have to do that. it's so cool and has such a potential to make an artistic or decorative piece with real quality.
I love Lithography. Taking another class next month
What a magic stone! It absorbs both water and oil! It's like sponge!
This is SO AWESOME!! I would love to learn how to do that!!
What a wonderful process. I would love to do that.
That was awesome; so explicit. Thank you
Magical. Simply magical.
Excellent explanations and video!
thanks for this super informative video!
awesome, loved this...thank you so much.
I just finished reading Susie Hodge's "The short story of art" and came here to understand how lithography is made. Great explanation, thanks!
Thank you!
fab vid and presentation. big ups n thanks
Very helpful! I read all about the process but coulnt quite understand it until I saw this video thanks.
Thanks for the video! I was looking for something that explained how some of MC Escher works were made. Thanks very muck!
awesome video clip!
After years of admiring Escher, now I LOVE him even more.
So complex, so difficult, so beautiful.
Erm, probably quite costly too, but worth it in the long run, I suppose!
Very good video!
when buying old books
makes me wonder how books with color and graphics were made before digital
Very instructive. : )
Very usefull! Thank you.
Nice!
Amazing.
Awesome man
What a wizardry just happend 🤣
Fascinating
Printing images to paper and be able to reproduce that printing over and over again without losing quality, before modern printing tech this was the only way to reliably make large numbers of similar printings like posters, news papers magazines etc.
How many prints before having to re-ink the stone? Are stones reusable? Or once they've been used for a print they are etched forever?
what a process..
Cool man..
Really good video
I see artists offering lithographs of their original oil paintings. How are those prints marketed as Lithographs? The original is not on a rock,it's on canvas or board.
I like Crayola KRANS!
Can you do this without an expensive press?
How strong was the etch?
what is the purpose of lithography
i know that usin a computer is the main choose but you could not draw that mutch detail and then get that same image printed thats why people still uses this process
Nice video thanks! Wouldn't you roll up the image in 'non dry' black before applying the etch?
Howdy! - My father gave me a lithograph stone that belonged to my grandfather - it appears to be made of granite ( i am not sure) It has white blotches, faded white blotches and what appears to be tiny white lines - how can I clean this without fading the image. thank you in advance for your speedy reply
I am wanting to do something that looks like lithography drawings for my AP art portfolio, can anyone recommend any artistic practices/medium that could get a look similar to lithography?
Litography, mother of the modern printing industry...
Great :)
Is the process the same when you do it on an aluminum plate instead of a stone? BTW, thank you for sharing, this is a great video! :)
So this is very thorough & well done but I still don’t understand how any of it works lol
How is the stone made to be so flat?
Remarkable. I really wonder how all the trial and error with all the various chemicals and substances ever came about. This goes back to the early 1800s if I'm not mistaken. Wow!
PS: Great video!
holy duck!
굿굿
Besides the drawing, I don't see this process as art. I see it as following and mastering a process - a much more rigid and scientific way of thinking. I've always found printmaking to be very confining artistically.
what did he say licotine ?
Thank you I just wanted to know what a lithograph was. "Based on the Greek words stone writing, lithography originally used the immiscibility of oil and water to produce prints" Google's unsatisfying answer.
Oh by the way this guy could definitely sell this knowledge, we didn't need to know that much, it was like an apprenticeship.
how much does something like this cost artists?
This is how my signed Lithograph by Lorde was made?? Tea
I literally looked up this video because I ordered the same one and wasn't sure what a lithograph was LOL
Omg I'm literally here for the same reason
oh for heavens sakes just shove the dam thing in a zerox phhhhhhhhhhh
i am a new artist, 43 yrs old, and have found out that I might have the 'x" factor. Kinda weird, I was just doing sketches, and coloring them in, I have a real artist friend that does amazing life like portraits in oil, and he tells me I have the thing. Ok, so, now I have all kinds of things to think about, but this video, so educational, makes me want to try different things.
Only the drew part of the stone can wipe ink.
Anybody here from reading Walter Benjamin’s Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction?
Water and ink....
All the modern offset printing machines works on same principle.
who is here cuz of a school assignment
Interesting process. Just one correction, though: it is impossible that touching the stone with fingers would leave an image because of "grease from my skin", as he put it, because there aren't sebaceous (oil) glands in the palms and fingers, so no grease will come off of them. Maybe he meant sweat, because the hands do have sweat glands. Just sayin:)
This is crude simple printing from stone - chromolithography is far more amazing!
what. how. when. WHO.
This video is a 10/10 in presentation and information.
The Yoko Ono screams video is a solid 0/10
escher
too much science for an artist
I had an interest in lithography until I saw this... to many steps smh
why didn't ur hottie helper appear more visibly on the video,
she shy or somethin? i know im being a hotdogger...sorry