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Beasts Print Show | Modern Printmaking Fulmination
Written by Jacob Covey | Filed under productionBeasts 16 Oct 2008 3:15 PM

Crane_Screenprint.jpg

I have quietly been organizing a BEASTS! print show for the Fantagraphics Bookstore and Gallery's Second Anniversary in December. Details will come in November but in short: The show will feature art from any of the 180 international artists who wish to make non-digital prints of their beast, whether it's the art that ran in the books or new variations. What follows here is simply a manifesto of sorts-- an explanation for why this print show is what it is. This came about because some people were confused why I don't want to sell digital prints, including our hard-working gallerist who was supportive but stressed the pragmatic fact that digital prints sell.

Admittedly, I'm making a soapbox stand with this show by insisting on prints that have had the human hand involved somehow and by denouncing digital prints which are exactly what they sound like: Prints done on an inkjet printer. These prints are also called "giclée" by those who are understandably embarrassed by all the coldness that is connoted by the term "digital print." Honestly, the only reason to call digital prints giclée is to distract from their origin and to imply repsectability. What is a screenprint? A print made through (traditionally silk) screens. What is a giclée? I have no idea. This great article on the etymology tells me it's a French term that could mean the following: "a spurt of blood, a burst of machine-gun fire, a splashing with mud." So the term is awesomely poetic but still only poetic propoganda.

In fairness, the argument for giclée prints are their high quality (born from the computer's exactitude) and if your only concern is one of precision replication of an other, original piece of art then giclee is the way to go. However, as an emotional investment in Art Making its print-on-demand nature makes it a cop-out on the part of artists or, more commonly, the merchandiser (or, uh, gallery) who offers to make the prints for artists. Furthermore, compared to the meticulous craft that goes into all traditional print-making forms a giclee print is truly nothing more than Product. Even if the original creation was unmistakeably Art, the shadow that is a giclée is but a soulless Product.

I think it's crucial that the buyer is aware that the print is a product that can be replicated at a moment's notice (just send it to print on the computer) and reproduced infinitely, without variation. And while these prints can be promised as limited editions this is still essentially meaningless inasmuch as a person could scan and print a virtually identical giclée. Frequently this limited edition is only printed as orders come in so a limited edition of 10 prints may never even get made past the one you order. I'm sure this rarely happens but it does happen and even as a theoretical practice I find it cheap and subversive to the model that artists rely upon in valuing reproduction editions.

Meanwhile there is a mind-boggling craft involved in all traditional print-making that makes any hand-crafted print far more valuable than any digital print. Perhaps it sounds snobbish to make these distinctions but the truth is that giving something a French name in order to sell it is far more snooty than my position which is as an advocate for the value of Art in this Age of Mechanical Reproduction. Aside from the fact that giclée prints are far more expensive per-unit than most any other process, I simply find it consumerist and soulless to actively convince people that a digital print has any value beyond decoration or as reference material. It is, as a kind of Platonic thing, not capable of being Art. For example, screenprinting is perhaps the most common and well-known non-printing-press, print-making technique [entertaining Aesthetic Apparatus instructional video here]. It's potentially cheap and easy if also messy. It can be as simple as one-color screened on paper or something complex and nuanced like this 24-layer Gary Baseman print from Decoder Ring. But it has SOUL that resonates back through generations of our ancestors who developed hands-on methods for spreading information and art. 

And you can FEEL the ink when you run your hand over the surface of a screenprint. You can see flaws, shifts in registration, places where the screen flow became dried up, etc. The ink has characteristics that interact from one color to the next. You can stare at the art as a built-up object and every print is crafted-- either with such imprecision that every print is distinctly unique or with such precision as to baffle the viewer who understands the process (like anyone who has ever picked up a pen can marvel at Charles Burns' machine-like lines). But the point is that every one of these prints becomes a new piece of art. The original art is its own entity and every single reproduction is another. 

Jordan Crane is a surprisingly perfect example of this. A man of absolute craft, he has decidedly flawed screenprints. His original art for the Lestrygonian of BEASTS! Book One is gorgeously executed with subtle pencil marks still showing under the seemingly-effortless inked art (with almost no correction fluid used on his lines). The black line art of the original is brought to life further through his coloring in the screenprinted version of this art but it also shows the inconsistency of watery inks that are laid down by the artist in his makeshift print studio. Every screenprint certainly has its own final appearance but more importantly it feels like an extension of the artist and if you know that he personally researched and built the studio and makes these prints himself and probably destroys half the run in a rage against the imperfections, well, it just imbues more life in the print when you look at it.

Some artists use this process as a means to essentially create the original art. For example, a few years ago I bought this print by Mat Daly. There is no original art as such-- this is all cut from rubylith. If you don't know what that means you probably can't appreciate every level of this complicated print but suffice it to say that there is no "original" art except in the form of many ruby-colored translucent sheets that have been cut into shapes and layered on top of one another. It requires someone with a keen ability to intuitively pre-visualize and it's jaw-dropping what he does-- beside the fact that the art itself is beautiful and smart. 

Jay Ryan might be a more traditional example of someone using print-making to create a new "original" work. His posters start out as original pencil drawings which are sometimes collaged together via xeroxing (creating a kind of third "original") and then colored by means of cutting film in the screenprinting process I believe. (He also uses a lot of "split fountains" to dynamic effect-- a coloring process that is intrinsically ever-shifting.) 

Jesse LeDoux represents a mostly-digital artist who makes printed work via screenprinting. His art becomes all about reducing the work to simplified shapes and colors that translate to the limitations and opportunities unique to screenprinting (for example, he uses a lot of overlaying of colors to extend his palette-- for people only familiar with Photoshop that's like using the Multiply feaure in your layers palette but you only get to see the result by burning film and printing the layers). 

Monoprints are the ultimate example of print-making as Art. Lizz Hickey is one of my favorite artists carrying that torch. Much of her work involves physically and chemically etching metal plates (sometimes shaping the plates into specific forms that leave a desired imprint in soft, cottony paper) and she frequently takes this print-making a step further by hand-coloring or drawing on the print, potentially ruining her efforts. The work is obsessive and if you don't feel life coarsing through the print when you hold it then none of this writing here probably matters to you. I sometimes (seriously) think that if I left the house for a week I could come home to her print having spawned Killoffer-like, taking over the walls of every room.

Meanwhile, readers of this diatribe might wonder about all the digital artists whose work seems too layered, too full of continuous tone to make affordable prints other than inkjet giclée. I felt badly excluding those artists from the print show but two brilliant artists put me at ease by endorsing this stand against giclée: One who will be part of the show and one who will not. Collagist/photographer Thomas Allen told me that he still shoots on film (because it matters) and maybe he doesn't make albumen prints but he does make prints on good old-fashioned light-sensitive paper.

Yuko Shimizu is a highly-regarded mostly-digital artist who I admire all the more for writing this to me: "As a digital artist I don’t believe in selling digital prints, so more power to you. I won’t be able to participate in the show, but that sounds great, congratulations. ...People constantly ask me why I don’t sell prints. I just don’t believe in them!!"

So that's my reason for the non-giclée BEASTS! print show. We, the 180 artists, hereby offer an anomaly befitting the subject of mythological beasts: Prints made by hand. I hope people will support these artists who are invested in giving traditional stories a form and allowing meaning and craft to hold primacy over technology.



Comments (7)Add Comment
David Traynor
Oh I beg to differ Sir
written by oldface, October 17, 2008
I am afraid MR COVEY I will clash you AGAIN on this one. Of course there is no comparison between digital prints and traditional hand made prints, But there is NO comparison between say a woodcut/etching/stone-lithograph and a screenprint! Screenprinting is cool and brilliant but it is the most commercial and quickest of the above, it was actually made in to a fine art form by MR Andy Warhol, a very hands off artist, as a quick and mechanical way to produce large 'faux' painting. It was the traditional industrial method to produce t-shirts and posters(along with offset lithography) cheaply and quickly. If anything Digital printing is the natural successor to screenprinting and offset lithography. Fair enough there is alot of shady profit making going on in the crappy-e-er end of commercial art with regards to digital prints (faking texture and alot of bullshit about edition sizes and signatures) and I agree Giclee is a naff junk name, the equivalent of thee 'Graphic Novel' term no? Comics are comics and Digital print is a digital print, yes? I make woodcuts, lino etchings, paintings, collages, drawings etc you name it and have won prizes for my woodcuts and collages and was chosen for a 3 month printmaking residency in Sir J J School of Art in Mumbia INDIA. Now I whole-lee embrace making Digital Art, you can make fantastic full colour work in a way that would not be possible in painting or drawing or screen printing with out incurring much expense, time and many many materials and even then it still would not be possible. But not only that but you can, if you know what you are doing, now print them out as big as you want beautifully! and people can own them!! Thats an amazing thing for an artist. Why the hell do you think printmaking got started in the first place!! So artists could reproduce there work and sell it cheaply. Woodcuts lead to engraving which lead to etching, Stone lithography lead to off set lithography which lead to oilbased screen printing, this lead waterbased screen printing. this then lead into more digital/technical screenprinting which brings us bang up to Photoshop. Printmaking has always been placed secondary to painting, because its not'painting' frankly, so there for its not as 'fine' an art. C-R-A-P. Wood engravers look down upon relief printers. Etchers look down upon photetchers. Stone lithographers look down upon offset lithographers. Hand burnishers look down upon press users. BUT THEY ALL LOOK DOWN UPON SCREENPRINTERS!! So wise up, Artists will use anything to make art from bus tickets and mud to diamonds and super hi tech equipment. The limitations of any technique/process, artists will turn to their advantage and exploit. So please dont take such a snotty conservative/republican attitude. For a perfect professional example of how you are completely wrong. Glasgow Print Studio, a world famous center for printmaking excellence http://www.gpsart.co.uk/ where I and countless others have gone to make lithographs, etchings/screenprints relief etc and regularly editions and portfolios very famous Artists work, now has a state of the Art super hi tech digital editing suite with a custom made printer and paper made by Somerset paper mill, who make etching paper, screenprinting paper and traditional Japanese woodcut paper. Its not cheap either, £40 a metre so you gotta get your artwork right first!. but thats the fantastic advantage of this medium, and thats what this is, a medium...just like oil painting, drawing, watercolour or printmaking, so you can work on an image and store it on a little disc. AMAZING, thats fucking incredible. This is early days for this technology and all its complications, say your previous post about scanner limitations, but I really think YOU SHOULD BE TURNING this TO YOUR ADVANTAGE. Do you think PICASSO, TURNER, REMBRANDT, WARHOL HARVEY KURTZMAN would be be whinging about such things. Picasso would love Photoshop, so would Dali and Picasso loved printmaking, real printmaking! etching, lithography not lazee old screenprinting. If anything DIGITAL imaging and the subsequent printing technology present Artists with the means (for the first time ever) of a way of editioning complicated detailed full colour paintings (that could be months, years of work) without loss of quality or aesthetics. The fact that they are made in a computer is irrelevant. Really it is! All the little eccentricities and errors that occur in printmaking like miss registration, more ink being in one area, various colour layers showing thru were only in hindsight decided to be interesting. The traditional Japanese master woodblock printer with Barren in hand would always be trying to eliminate them. So all things you dont like now about scanners and digital prints will in time become something Artists will appreciate and exploit. Rant over no hard feelings meant David
David Traynor
...
written by oldface, October 17, 2008
oh and if you go here its not meant to be a plug sorry, http://www.flickr.com/photos/11393854@N05/2464841141/in/set-72157604879771838/ but you can see a little tour guide page showing one of my woodcuts with a lino etch on the back. But someone loves the actually promo artwork so much that they asked for a big print of it(a print of a print within a print) and now thanks to digital printing I can not only do it but do it amazingly well. And all those type faces and words are all hand drawn using a drawing tablet and light pen
David Traynor
...
written by oldface, October 17, 2008
not the woodcut though, thats hand drawn and hand cut. I will shut up now
Jacob Covey
...
written by covey, October 17, 2008
David, I'm really glad someone as educated in the mediums as you obviously are is taking a stand here (although you tend towards being offensive which isn't helpful to your case). Silkscreening was the focus of my writing primarily because this blog isn't a printmaking blog and far more people know what silkscreening is than lithography or etching, etc. And because POLITICALLY I find it appealing. It is a people's medium. I'm not as ignorant as you accuse me of being-- I'm aware that all kinds of printmakers look down on screenprinting for various reasons but I'm not about to let that bias dictate my feelings on this issue. Fundamentally I feel that all of your angst about screenprinting is made irrelevant when you consider that people like Mat Daly are using the form as the end-all. It is exploited to craft art just the same as cutting a woodblock. I have also wrestled in the past with the question of whether I'm being too conservative in my denouncement of giclée prints. But then I hold one of those prints and, honest to God, I feel nothing at all when looking at them. (Similar to any postcard mailers I get from artists- they serve a practical function but they aren't meaningful artifacts.) It has made me resolutely comfortable with my position, whether you view it as 'republican' (????) or I view it as taking a stand against a trend that I see as devaluing the experience of viewing art. (I'm going to have made some friends mad at me for this by the way.) Where I think you're making assumptions is that I'm indiscriminately against artists exploring the potential of the digital printing medium. I'm fond of experimenting with mediums in creating art. My feeling is that digital prints as an artifact AT THIS SPECIFIC TIME IN HISTORY do nothing to benefit art-making and they are currently being made at a ridiculously high level and purported to be valuable reproductions. It is a medium that is good for decoration or reference but too many artists are creating soulless reproductions of their work simply because it's easy. [Oh- and my stance on comics is that the term "Graphic Novel" serves a function under the umbrella that is "Comics." There's nothing wrong with it being used to denote long-form works. It's just a problem if the user is embarrassed to admit they do comics. Still, the term comics seems flawed from the get-go because of its association with humor. So whatever. "Giclée" tells me nothing more about the printing process than "inkjet" or "digital print" does.]
Jacob Covey
...
written by covey, October 17, 2008
ALSO: I wish some of the artists who have written me on this topic since this post was made would post their thoughts here as well, pro or con. It's been gratifying to find out that artists are motivated to try new processes for this show. Tom Neely, for example, is planning to make a letterpress print watercolored by hand.
David Traynor
...
written by oldface, October 17, 2008
I agree theres lots of rubbish glyclee prints of digital photographs of bad paintings of course!! Same as there's millions of bad hand made prints, paintings, 'illustrated long form sequential narratives in book form' (graphic novel means nothing at all its a ridiculous term, all novels are graphic!) ..and I love screen printing... ...I love all mediums in fact. But theres fantastic digital artists out there who pour there heart and soul in to there work and theres not one jot of that lost by printing it. Thats why it was made, the process(soul) is in the making not the printing...thats why apart from having multiples of the same image there's no comparison. they actually dont bear any relation to each other. As I said digital artwork is more akin to painting. Making a digital print on your home printer of your painting that you scanned in is a world away from what I am talking about. I also outlined the benefits to art making. To make multiples of something that could be not made multiples of before is very democratic and free. By replacing digital prints with screenprinting for your exhibition is not too great a leap at all aesthetically. The ink is hardly raised off the surface at all and very rarely is textured paper used, really its the nearest to poster form (but then lithography was the same (cue French accent as Toulouse Lautrec looks up shouting angrily at the Salon curators who inquire after his painting and not this 'mechanically made' crude poster). At Glasgow Print studio screen printing is almost always used for editioning guests artists work as its the quickest and most mechanical and least problematic of the mediums so its literally a hairs breadth away from digital printing,which they are pretty much replacing it with anyway, honestly! If you really wanted to take stand against soulless forms of reproduction you picked the weakest one. Again I am not biased, I have made screen prints but found that it was too flat/smooth a medium for me, the raised quality and thickness of ink of relief printing I have settled, on they have more of an object quality. Plus I have to say if you make a digital bit of art for printing it is not a reproduction at all it is the actual artwork...there is no matrix...the thing you see on the screen is 0's and 1's. I'm sorry but I do find it offensive that something I have bust a gut making, agonising over, that was always intended to be printed can be dismissed because of the medium it was made in. You just sound like a Philistine. Of course you can hate the picture all you want ;)) But all art in some way is a reproduction anyway (of idea), though it might change for the better in the making. Do you not think that successful cavepainting critic Monsieur Og was as dismissive when the world shattering move from red mud on cave wall to burnt charcoal on animal hide was made. Protesting savagely 'Merde why zis iz soulless, bah diz iz just illustratione it az none of ze wall texture...and where are ze fucking Buffalo anyway!' I think its fantastic that you will have an exhibition of screen prints but c'mon. The Mat Daly print mentioned is a perfect example, there would be no real difference if the image had been made digitally(..well made of course) and being a screen print. Also no digital prints will ever be the same, there will always be imperfections. Too much ink might come out, not enough ink might come out ther might be a slight glitch/jump. These as mentioned in previous polemic will become admired and used by artists as time goes on. Republican is the yank equiv of Conservative is it not? As punks and situationists have always said 'if in doubt a Brick will do the trick' so this is not Offense Sir but poetry.
David Traynor
...
written by oldface, October 17, 2008
I am talking about original artwork here, not reproductions of paintings or drawings. Most of the Artwork for your book will have been processed at some point in to digital terms for printing yes? So nothing would be lost in digitally printing it. In fact the few bits I saw of the previous book would be ideal for it. I just wanted to be clear what I am whining on about. Its just another medium thats all, remember the synthesizer? It was cold and soulless and machine made music, no no not like a piano or guitar at all. Now look what goes on. People actively seek out those old skool synths precisely because of the emotional resonance the sounds those machines gave to people. Its the same here. Do you see?

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