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The Impact of Giclée A shift towards digital print in future art
Mamata B. Herland BA (Hons) Fine Art
3rd February 2003
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Abstract
The intention in this dissertation is to investigate the impact of Giclée and the
emerging inkjet print technology. The impact it has made on number of artists
worldwide is discussed based on direct responses from artists, museums and other
relevant sources. Adaptation of digital technology by artists challenges conventional
conceptions and assumptions about work of art, re-questions the qualities of art, the
concept of originality and acceptance in the art world.
From the technical and theoretical research on these issues, this dissertation further
investigates and discusses the shift that is taking place, not only from conventional
print techniques to digital methods, being able to create prints of technical quality at
least comparable to traditional prints, but also to the future of art in a digital world,
with particular references to the Internet. The digitised image can be 'synthesised'
with other images created by use of traditional methods. Artists are collaborating
with other geographically separated artists and artworks are presented and sold on
the World Wide Web. Use of digital technology to create art can influence the artist's
ideas, attitude and perception, resulting in possibilities for a change of the content,
form and context of the artwork.
Internationally known artists like David Hockney and Richard Hamilton use digital
print technology, and digital prints are exhibited at well-reputed museums.
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List of Illustrations
Front page: Mamata Herland, Uncertainty, 2002, Digital ink jet on
water-colour paper
Figure 1: Mamata Herland, Thank You, 2001, Giclée on water-colour paper
Figure 2: Richard Hamilton, The Marriage, Iris Digital print
Figure 3: David Hockney, The Studio March 28th 1995, Iris Ink jet print
Figure 4: Computer devices involved in digital printing process
Figure 5: ColorSpan Displaymaker XII, functional details
Figure 6: Sue Gollifer, Untitled, 2001, Iris print, Scanned textures mapped onto geometric forms, from computer generated film separations of the digital original
Figure 7: Mamata Herland, Lifeline, 2002, manipulated photo with multiple
layers, Digital ink jet on canvas Figure 8: Jim Dine, Orange Pants, 1999, Digital pigment print on canvas
Figure 9: Pedro Meyer, is she now mine?, www.zonezero.com
Figure 10: Concept by H-Ray Heine, Generation/Mutation, images modified by different artists
Figure 11: James Faure-Walker, Chair, Green and Cardboard, 2002, Giclée Iris print, www.dam.org
Figure 12: Barbara Rauch and Liz Chandler, Tete-a-Tete, Digital Responses,
2002, www.vam.uc.uk
Figure 13: Julian Opie, Study for Wall at WAM, 2001, inkjet on paper, Worchester Art Museum, www.worcesterart.org
Figure 14: Mamata Herland, Where to?, 2002, Digital ink jet on canvas
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Acknowledgements
Giclée and digital ink jet is a relatively new subject with little relevant literature
available. Much of the content of this dissertation has therefore been developed
based on responses to numerous letters, emails and questionnaires that were sent
during summer and autumn 2002. I would therefore like to thank all the artists,
curators, print studios, authors, magazine editors, commercial companies, art school
lecturers and professors who took the time to respond and show interest. Without
their invaluable contributions this dissertation would not have been possible.
I would also like to thank my husband, Geir Herland, for all his support and
encouragement.
Figure 1: Mamata Herland, Thank You, 2001, Giclée on water-colour paper
Winchester, 3rd February 2003
Mamata B. Herland
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Table of Contents
1.0 INTRODUCTION.................................................................................1
2.0 GICLÉE AND DIGITAL INK JET ........................................................3
2.1 Background .................................................................................................................................... 3
2.2 Digital Printing .............................................................................................................................. 6
2.3 Terminology ................................................................................................................................. 11
2.4 Conclusion .................................................................................................................................... 12
3.0 THE IMPACT OF GICLÉE .....................................................................13
3.1 Printmaking ................................................................................................................................. 13
3.2 Photography................................................................................................................................. 15
3.3 Painting......................................................................................................................................... 17
3.4 Conclusion .................................................................................................................................... 21
4.0 ORIGINAL REPRODUCTIONS .............................................................23
4.1 Originality and Authenticity....................................................................................................... 23
4.2 Limited Editions .......................................................................................................................... 26
4.3 The Art Market............................................................................................................................ 27
4.4 Conclusion .................................................................................................................................... 28
5.0 A SHIFT TOWARDS DIGITAL PRINT IN FUTURE ART ......................30
5.1 Artists and Digital ink jet............................................................................................................ 30
5.2 Exhibitions.................................................................................................................................... 33
5.3 Museums....................................................................................................................................... 34
5.4 Other shift indicators .................................................................................................................. 36
5.5 Conclusion .................................................................................................................................... 37
6.0 CONCLUSION .......................................................................................39
7.0 BIBLIOGRAPHY....................................................................................42
SUPPORTING SOURCES ............................................................................44
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1.0 Introduction
Giclée and digital ink jet is little more than a decade old as a Fine Art print
technology. The increasing number of applications made by artists in the last few
years clearly demonstrates an impact on printmaking, photography and painting,
resulting in an evolution of new ideas. As a consequence, there is a shift from the
conventional techniques towards creation of concept-led digital art.
To be able to establish a discussion on the shift towards digital print, it was
necessary to research whether this process has been accepted by leading museums
and galleries. To witness such development, I made number of visits to leading
galleries and museums in London exhibiting works using inkjet print technology.
Based on the knowledge I gathered sets of questionnaires were prepared. One type of
questions were sent to selected artists [Appendix 1], another set of questions to
museums and galleries [Appendix 2] and a third set to printing studios and suppliers
[Appendix 3]. Other sources responded, including authors, professors, lecturers and
magazine editors, mainly in UK and USA, sending useful information and referred
to further supporting study materials [Appendix 4]. Around two hundred and eighty
letters and emails were sent during summer/autumn 2002, and around eighty of them
responded. When, in the dissertation, I am referring to a specific received response,
reported in detail in the appendices, a footnote with resource reference and response
date (dd.mm.yy) is used. Without Internet and the World Wide Web I could not have
done extensive research on this particular subject area.
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In chapter 2 the Giclée process is described with a proposed definition of Giclée and
Digital ink jet. How to ensure permanence and longevity of digital prints are also
discussed.
It is stated that digital technology has led to a blurring of the conventionally accepted
distinctions within printmaking. Creating art of 'synthesis' is possible by integrating
print, painting and photography, as well as other art forms. Such creative impact of
digital print and technology is discussed in chapter 3. Whether a digital ink jet on
canvas should be regarded as a painting is also included in the discussion.
In chapter 4 issues regarding originality and authenticity are discussed in relation to
Walter Benjamin's essay 'The work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction'.
It is argued that with digital art there is no physical original. Digital artworks might
be seen as the ultimate reproducible art on the threshold of real democratised art.
Internet and the World Wide Web are also having an impact on these issues.
Digital technology offers artists broader possibilities and greater control and freedom
to create, output, exhibit and market their works. Indicators of a shift towards digital
print in future art are discussed in chapter 5, and the scepticism regarding Giclée and
digital ink jet has gradually diminished.
Chapter 6 concludes that Giclée and digital ink jet have a significant impact on Fine
Art. The content, form and context of an artwork can now be broadened and
diversified by the new creative possibilities offered by digital technology.
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2.0 Giclée and Digital ink jet
A Giclée or a Digital ink jet is an artwork created by the use of a computer and a
high-quality digital inkjet printer. Images created on, or copied to, a computer, are
sent as data information to an electronic printer. The printer software translates the
data into electrical impulses that are fed through the printer heads, releasing tiny
amounts of ink onto a variety of media, resulting in images with a rich and vibrant
colour.
2.1 Background
Artists have been employing computers to generate and manipulate images since the
early 1980's. Computers were used by several artists, among others Richard
Hamilton, David Hockney and Sidney Nolan, who experimented with the 'Quantel
Paintbox' for a 1987 BBC 2 TV series entitled Painting with Light. In 1998 Richard
Hamilton wrote:
Computers appear to offer as dramatic a challenge as that issued by photography 100 years ago. … It became evident very soon after their introduction that there was a hard-copy problem.1
1 Richard Hamilton, www.in-print.org.uk, the text first appeared in the Alan Cristea Gallery exhibition catalogue New Technology and Printmaking 1998.
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Figure 2: Richard Hamilton, The Marriage, Iris Digital print
Commercial print companies saw an interesting market within the art segment.
Entrepreneurial artists and print studios like Cone Editions, USA, were involved in
the development, and the Iris printer was the first digital printer introduced for Fine
Art, thereof the term 'Iris print'. Paul Jackson, being one of the first artists who
employed Iris print technology states his reason:
I was in search of a better quality of print for my watercolour than offset printing. The Iris printer offered richer print quality, more lightfast inks, and the ability to print low quantity on demand.2
2 Paul Jackson (USA, painter; www.pauljackson.com), mail dated 10.07.02
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The Iris printer was an answer to Hamilton's hard copy problem. The vibrant rich
colours were appealing, but the dye-based ink of the Iris printer had no long-lasting,
archival quality and therefore led to scepticism towards work of art produced by the
digital process. In 1996 David Hockney wrote:
It seems to me to be the most beautiful printing of photography I have seen. The colour on the paper seems almost physical. The surface of the paper itself is beautiful. My reply therefore to how permanent the colour is; is that colour is fugitive in life, like it is in pictures, indeed colour is the most fugitive element in all pictures, a great deal more than line. Dimming down the light immediately alters colour. It does not alter line. Enjoy the moment. The piece of paper is beautiful it will slowly change like everything else. What's the point of an ugly piece of paper that will last forever?3
Figure 3: David Hockney, The Studio March 28th 1995, Iris Ink jet print
3 David Hockney, www.in-print.org.uk. This text first appeared in the 20 Photographs exhibition catalogue 1996. Published by David Hockney Studio, Los Angeles, 1996
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Dorothy Simpson Krause has the computer as her primary art-making tool, and she
has used inkjet, thermal, laser, lightjet, dye sublimation and dot matrix printing
techniques to take her images from the screen to a fixed form, and she states:
The inkjet printer is currently the most versatile, cost-effective method of outputting digital prints.4
2.2 Digital Printing A personal computer, either on an IBM compatible platform or an Apple Mac,
including a monitor and a mouse or pencil is required in the digital printing process.
Software applications like Adobe Photoshop or Corel Painter are used to work with
the images, another set of software controls the printing process and the RIP (Raster
Image Processor) is used to organise the images. The image input devices are a
scanner, digital camera or a Photo-CD. Normally the user would also be connected
to the Internet and the World Wide Web. The figure below shows a typical set-up of
the computer devices, including the printer.
Figure 4: Computer devices involved in digital printing process
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The scanned image can be digitally manipulated and in many cases the artist co-
operates with the printmaker to crop, size, adjust or manipulate all or selective parts
of an image. To ensure quality, the image resolution, measured in dots per inch
(d.p.i.), needs to be considered, since it affects the system's ability to create fine
details. File size is important when it comes to calculating how large the final print
can be.
Before printing an image, the hardware devices need to be calibrated to ensure
colour matching. When data is transferred between different hardware devices,
software application and printers, colour change is inevitable since they use different
colour ranges. The monitor uses RGB (Red, Green and Blue) as the primary colours
and is an 'additive' system. Printers, however, use CMYK (Cyan, Magenta, Yellow
and blacK) that subtracts certain frequencies of light and reflects others. The
conversion from RGB to CMYK is extremely difficult since CMYK has a smaller
colour gamut. If the image is transferred from one platform to another, as when the
artist is transferring the image to a print studio, the problem increases. There are
software programs helping to reduce the colour management problem, but still
manually evaluating and correcting proofs by the artist is crucial before accepting
the BAT (Bon à Tirer) proof and printing the edition.
Artists' choice of substrates depends on their idea and intention for the final output.
Substrates that are commonly available are different types of papers e.g. photo-
glossy, matte or many types of watercolour papers and different types of canvas.
Paper and canvas can also be found coated and uncoated, and more or less
4 Dorothy Simpson Krause (USA, painter, Professor Massachusetts College of Art; www.dotkrause.com), mail dated 09.08.02
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waterproof. Other substrates available are vinyl, leather, film, banners, plastic and
etched aluminium plates. However, not all substrates can be used with any kind of
ink. The ink reacts to various coatings and chemicals. For example, dye-based ink
works best on glossy and uncoated substrates, while pigment-based inks work best
on coated substrates. Dye based inks have bright vivid colours, but are likely to fade
and are not waterproof. Pigment based inks are less vivid, though rich and earthy,
and are often more waterproof and more permanent. The Iris printer, for example,
can only use dye-based inks in contrast to the ColorSpan Displaymaker Mach 12,
which can have both dye and pigment based inks. Today there are number of
manufacturers like Epson, Hewlett Packard, Roland, Mimaki, and ColorSpan with
Giclée print quality. They all have, however, their benefits and drawbacks, e.g.
ColorSpan Mach 12 can have 12 different inks including the original 4 CMYK
colours. Other printers have 6 or 8 colours, and some have 4 different variations of
black. Different printers more or less have problems with banding (a horizontal path
on the image), metamerism (when colours change relative to on another in different
light sources) and continuous tone (smooth tonal transitions). Figure 5 shows some
functional details of a digital wide-format inkjet printer, exemplified by a ColorSpan
Displaymaker.
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Figure 5: ColorSpan Displaymaker XII, functional details
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To achieve the artist's intentions it is crucial to understand the possibilities and
limitations of substrates, inks and printers, not least how they all interact with each
other. The interaction of these factors are even more important regarding the
longevity of the prints with a ratio of 20:1, meaning that the difference in light
fading between the longest lasting ink-substrate combination and the least stable
combination is 20 years.5 Testing the combination of ink, substrate and printer using
the 'Blue Wool Scale' method, accredited British Standard (BS1006) and adopted as
International Standard (ISO), the Fine Art Trade Guild reports that the latest test
results show life expectancy rates of 100 to 200 years for some Giclée prints.6 When
printed on good quality heavyweight art paper the print should possess archival
standards of permanence or better than other collectable artwork. Protecting the print
from UV-light, humidity and acid-free materials helps to preserve the print.7
However, artwork deteriorates over time. When questioned if Tate Modern
experienced any problems with colour fading or effects of moisture and temperature,
they replied:
Yes - all these things but no more than happens with other media - both printed and painted/drawn. As with any process or technique if the materials are carefully chosen for durability then this can be achieved. Of course some artists do not always wish durability.8
Conservation plays an important role in preserving digital prints. The Museum of
Modern Art, NY, explains that:
5 Henry Wilhelm, Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc., 'The Intimate Relationships of Inks and Papers: You Can't Talk About the Permanence of One Without Considering the Other'. October 29, 1999 6 Colin Ruffell, 'Commercial giclee printing facilities for the self-publishing artist or gallery in the U.K.'. A report prepared for The Fine Art Guild, www.fineart.co.uk 7 Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc are often referred to when testing longevity of digital prints. Their website www.wilhelm-research.com have, however, been closed in most of 2002, and there was no response to letter or e-mail. In January 2003 the web site had reopened. 8 Tate Britain, mail dated 29.07.02
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At the Museum, we have not experienced any conservation problems with ink jet prints, but this is because we store all of our works in climate controlled areas and we do not generally keep works on paper on view for more than a few months at a time.9
2.3 Terminology
The word Giclée (pronounced 'zhee-clay') was coined in 1991 by Jack Duganne,
then working at Nash Editions. The word is derived from the French word 'gicleur'
meaning 'nozzle' and 'gicler' which is the verb 'to spray', meaning spraying nozzle or
the spraying of ink. The main intention was to distinguish Fine Art prints form those
created for commercial purposes, very much the same reason as 'serigraph'10 was
coined earlier. Today different terminology is used to address work printed by digital
technology. In Summer Exhibition 2002, at Royal Academy of Art, Jennifer
Dickson11 used the term 'Giclée print' on her Petal Screen, Milton Lodge. However,
using the same technology, William Alsop12, Goldsmiths Two and Edward
Cullinan13, Plan of Turner Gallery, Margate both used the term 'Digital print'.
Dorothy Simpson Krause defines Giclée
as reproductions of work done originally in another medium. I make inkjet prints of original digital art.14
Mr. Maklansky, assistant director at New Orleans Museum of Modern Art urges
that the term Giclée should not be used,15 and Stephen Goddard informs us that 'the
curatorial world is likely to use the term 'inkjet print''.16
9 The Museum of Modern Art, letter dated 13.08.02 10 Artist Anthony Velonis coined the term 'serigraph', 'seri' meaning silk in Latin and 'graphos' meaning to draw or write in Greek. 11 Exhibition Catalogue. Royal Academy Illustrated 2002, Royal Academy of Arts, 2002, p. 51 12 Ibid, p. 176 13 Ibid, p. 177 14 Dorothy Simpson Krause, mail dated 09.08.02 15 New Orleans Museum of Modern Art, mail dated 20.08.02
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Nash Editions states that:
We do not support the use of the term 'Giclée' to represent anything other than reproductions created for the 'decorative' art market. Most credible museums utilise the term 'digital ink-jet'.17
To have a consistent terminology I suggest that the term 'Giclée' should be applied to
reproductions of artwork originally created by the use of another medium, and
'Digital ink jet' for artworks intended for, and finally created by the use of a
computer and digital print technology.
2.4 Conclusion
Giclée and digital ink jet is a high quality inkjet print technology that requires the
use of a computer, and demands new skills and knowledge on the part of artists and
print studios. The process is less labour intensive then traditional techniques
allowing more time for the artist to be creative, and make images that are as visually
and aesthetically stunning as those produced by any other medium.
The quality of the final print depends on the artist's ability to combine the interactive
elements where the
final result is a combination of the original file or scan, printing machine, ink, substrate and protective top-coat. There are multiple combinations that give good results, but also many that do not work. To get the best results, one must experiment and test many combinations.18 A failure in any one area will cause the final product to likewise fail.19
The Fine Art Trade Guild confirms archival standard when using the right
combination.
16 Stephen Goddard (former President of Print Council of America), mail dated 10.09.02 17 Nash Editions, mail dated 15.08.02 18 Tara Materials, mail dated 08.08.02 19 Epic Digital Technology, mail dated 11.07.02
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3.0 The impact of Giclée
This chapter will discuss the digital impact on printmaking, photography and
painting, as well as show how computers and inkjet adds to the artist's possibilities,
not replacing old methods.
3.1 Printmaking For artists willing to experiment outside traditional printmaking techniques, digital
printmaking is another possibility for creative expression. 'As a relatively new
printmaking process its still very exciting in terms of experimentation.'20
Printmaking has always been closely linked to technological development, since it is
between the hand-made and mechanical reproduction, between the creative and the
technical process, between art for its own sake and commercial possibilities. With
digital printmaking the link to technology has become even stronger. Professional
printmaking studios like Cone Editions Press and Nash Editions have collaborated
with internationally well-known artists like Robert Rauschenberg, Jim Dine and
Helena Chappelin Wilson. The artist's physical presence at the print studio is,
however, no longer required since it is now possible to e-mail the image, discuss
with the printmaker using Internett and posting the proofs to be evaluated and
approved.
The emerging practices in digital print technology are leading to a 'synthesis' of art,
making it possible to include a painting, drawing or photography into a print and
20 Tate Britain, mail dated 29.07.02
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allowing for further manipulation. The cultural shift this represents may blur,
remove, or even reinforce boundaries commonly associated with the activity of
printmaking. Digital printmaking offers the possibility of generating radically new
physical, aesthetic and conceptual frameworks and process routes within
printmaking.
Figure 6: Sue Gollifer, Untitled, 2001, Iris print, Scanned textures mapped onto geometric forms, from computer generated film separations of the digital original
It can be argued that the appeal of the traditional prints is partly based on the
techniques themselves, and with digital technology there are no physical objects
manipulated by the actual hand of the artist or printmaker. According to this
argument a Giclée or digital ink jet cannot therefore be called a 'fine art print'. The
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definition of 'original' print, as defined in the 1960's,21 also emphasis the importance
of the manual involvement in making the print. Digital technology however, does
not only give exciting new possibilities, but it is also less labour intensive then
traditional techniques, giving the artist more time for creative work. I would
therefore argue that digital technology allows for a transfer, 'from the artist's hand to
the artist's mind', and that it is the artist's vision and quality of the art work that
would define it as Fine Art.
3.2 Photography
Photography and the subsequent development of the halftone, as developed in the
late nineteenth and early twentieth century, enabled the development of cheaper
printing through photomechanical processes. Fine Art printmaking became more
diversified as new techniques were introduced and accepted, and this development
has continued with inkjet.
Ink jet certainly has re-inforced the link between traditional fine art printmaking and art photography to a point where the two blend. 22
The photographic origin of many of the digital prints reflects the high level of
interest amongst photographers in Giclée processes being used to work in the
darkroom and manipulate their images. In the early 1960's Jerry N. Uelsmann
created techniques for seamlessly blending photographic images in the darkroom,23
and the same effects can now be achieved by using Photoshop. However, the
extraordinary control digital methods offers far surpass traditional darkroom
21 Lambert, Susan. PRINTS, Art and Techniques, London, V&A Publications, 2001, page 12 22 Tate Britain, mail dated 29.07.02 23 Kenneth A. Kerslake (USA, printmaker, Professor University of Florida; http://nersp.nerdc.ufl.edu/~kenk), mail dated 13.08.02. Examples of Uelsmann's work at www.uelsmann.com.
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techniques for negative and print manipulation. Scanned photographs can be edited,
partly masked, transformed, collaged, layered or otherwise combined.
Figure 7: Mamata Herland, Lifeline, 2001, manipulated photo with multiple layers, Digital ink jet on canvas
Another advantage with digital technique is the possibility of enlarging photo
negatives, eliminating problems with dust spots, loss of information in translation
through two generations of film images or difficulty in controlling the contrast and
density range of the final negative.
With inkjet printing, the image forming process and the paper it is printed on are, for
the first time, functionally separated. Photographers are now able to make prints on
virtually any absorbent material in variable sizes that can be fed through the printer.
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Some viewers expect a photograph to be a direct representation of an object or event.
Is it still a photograph when it is manipulated, either in the darkroom or by the use of
a computer? John Isaac claims:
It is a photograph and some times it is manipulated to look like a water colour or an oil painting. But it is photography. I also do not like to label everything as to journalistic, art, or any other name for my work. It is basically photography and whether someone likes it or not, that's what matters. No need to label it into categories.24
In my view the artist's intention is the major issue to whether an artwork is a
photograph or not. As Stephen Shore says: 'I regard what I do as 'art', and don't draw
a distinction between photography and painting.'25
3.3 Painting Digital painting applications, for example Corel Painter and Pixel Paint Pro make it
possible to use a mouse or a stylus for freehand drawing and painting. A program
like Painter is designed to reproduce, in great detail, effects associated with natural
media such as watercolour, pastels, pencil and charcoal. With the proper surface
treatment, it is possible to paint with oil or acrylic on top of the printed image to
produce a new individual 'mixed media' piece - a digital painting as Dorothy
Simpson Krause calls it.26 Helen Golden often alters the printed surface with
traditional media like acrylic paint or coloured pencils, and calls her 'hybrid creative
product mixed media 'tradigital' work'.27
24 John Isaac (USA, photographer, photojournalist; www.johnisaac.com), mail dated 09.08.02 25 Stephen Shore (USA, photographer, Susan Weber Soros Professor in the Arts, Bard College), mail dated 30.09.02 26 Dorothy Simpson Krause, mail dated 09.08.02 27 Helen Golden (USA, photographer), mail dated 12.08.02/www.micropubnews.com
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A painting, formerly unique and one of a kind, can now be reproduced by using
digital print and then the digitised painting can be exhibited on a virtual web-gallery,
opening up a broader audience and market for the artist.
Figure 8: Jim Dine, Orange Pants,1999, Digital pigment print on canvas
In his coming book 'Painting and the Digital Adventure' James Faure-Walker
describes the immense possibilities of digital technology:
This marvellous technology must change the way we think about painting. So much more becomes possible in the control of colour, in the manipulation of forms, the incorporation of photos, and so on….. Unlike its physical counterpart the digital image can be corrected, duplicated, stored, remastered in a different colour scheme, at a different scale, blended in with a photograph. Year by year the quality of printed output improves and the gap between 'real' colour, that is to say brushed on pigment, and 'virtual' colour (which is also pigment on watercolour paper or on canvas) narrows. So if the question was simply can this technology simulate and perhaps eventually replace 'traditional' paint media then the answer is a hesitant yes.
19
He further argues about
the convenience of digital painting: the hours spent preparing canvases, mixing paint, washing brushes, waiting for paint layers to dry, could be spent on the essential creative matters.28
The question arises whether digital painting on canvas can be regarded as a painting?
Works by artists who employed untraditional tools, materials and methods, are still
addressed as 'paintings'. If it is a painting when John Hoyland splash the paint on a
canvas, Peter Blake use gloss house painting, Roy Lichtenstein use Ben Day dots
and Andy Warhol use stencils, then it can be argued that artwork 'painted with
pixels' using digital print technology also can be considered a 'painting'. The
Museum of Modern Art would regard an inkjet print as a painting 'in the same sense
that a Warhol screenprint on canvas is considered a painting'.29 According to
Lambert, inkjet prints are also defined as a stencil process, supporting this view.30
Gerard Hemsworth's opinion is:
Why not ? It would be addressed within the context of painting. Your question does not seem to me to be very important. I seem to remember a lot of fuss being made about Andy Warhol's work in the 60's being prints and not paintings. Who cares ? As long as it's an interesting work of art.31
ePic Digital Technology argues that ink jet is not a painting in the traditional sense, but
is painting in the sense that the artists establishes a vision, a thought, executes the thought either manually or digitally and then that thought is transferred to canvas (digital painting if you will) and will redefine the word paint.32
28 James Faure-Walker (UK, painter, Senior Research Fellow in Fine Art Kingston University), mail dated 20.08.02 29 The Museum of Modern Art, NY, letter dated 13.08.02 30 Lambert, Susan. PRINTS, Art and Techniques, London, V&A Publications, 2001, page 90 31 Gerard Hemsworth (UK, painter, Professor at Goldsmiths College, University of London), mail dated 10.07.02
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Kenneth A. Kerslake argues, however, that:
I could not regard just inkjet on canvas as a painting. Painting is first and foremost about paint and the painted surface. The surface of a painting has a physical presence (thick and thin paint) that lays on the surface of the canvas in a way that one feels and can enjoy or be moved by. Forms emerge from the paint in other words. I think each medium has its own characteristics that should be recognised and used, even when mixing many mediums together.33
Victoria & Albert Museum seems to have a supportive view, stating that 'the process
is more defining than the support', 34 Tate Britain view is that 'painting is a human
action as well as an activity'35 and Manchester Art Gallery 'would not accept Giclée
on canvas as painting although the effect can be similar'.36
When asked if John Hilliard's digital prints on canvas are about painting, Ian
McKeever replied: ‘no, not really’ and that it lacks clarity of medium.37 John
Hilliard's response is:
If he was asked whether my prints on canvas were painting, then Ian McKeever would be right in saying 'no'. If he was asked whether they were about painting, then he would be wrong, because much of my work references painting, even though it doesn't actually use the medium. If by 'clarity of the medium' Ian means physical presence, then I would agree with him that as a rule painting seems more presently 'there' as a medium than photography.38
John Hilliard also states that 'there's no hierarchy as far as I'm concerned - just
different specificity'.39
32 ePic Digital Technology, mail dated 11.07.02 33 Kenneth A. Kerslake, mail dated 13.08.02 34 Victoria & Albert Museum, mail dated 18.08.02 35 Tate Britain, mail dated 29.07.02 36 Manchester Art Gallery, mail dated 24.07.02 37 'Symposium on painting', a video from a conference, debating painting, held at Nottingham in 1997 38 John Hilliard (UK, photographer, Professor Slade School of Fine Art), letter dated 20.07.02 39 John Hilliard, letter dated 20.07.02
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In spite of variations of opinions in the discussion above, I would argue that an
original digital print on canvas does not lack any more clarity of medium than
screenprints or other accepted methods, and should therefore be regarded as a
painting in the same manner.
3.4 Conclusion Just as screenprinting became an accepted art medium in the 1960s after years of use
in commercial printing, so too is digital ink jet and Giclée entering the mainstream
of art. Digital technology will not replace the old media but encourage new ways of
thinking and working, creating a synergy and 'synthesis' between old and new
processes, opening up new areas of freedom and diversity. The challenge is to move
on from the legacy of traditional process-led art to concept-led digital art creation
with a broader definition of its possibilities.40
Art is about ideas, not about technology. Technology gives, however, new
possibilities for ideas and the medium has always been closely linked to the idea and
intention of the work, never its reason for being. With digital print the link to
technology has become even closer. It is less labour-intensive, allowing more time
for creative art making. Photographers are now able to make prints on a greater
variety of substrates, and Photoshop is replacing traditional darkroom techniques.
James Faure-Walker, in a discussion with his German gallery representative, states
that:
40 See for example Barfield, N., Barfield, R. and Whale, G. 'Defying Convention: Emergent Practices in Digital Printing', Point: Art and Design Research Journal, vol. 1, no. 12, (2001), pp. 4-14.
22
just because an image was on canvas that didn't mean it was a painting. He asked why so, and I was shocked and dismayed to find I couldn't answer.41
Painters have always used traditional and untraditional methods and tools, and their
artworks are referred to as paintings. Artworks produced and presented by the new
digital technology should therefore be referred to as paintings as well, in the same
way as when Andy Warhol used the new screen print technique to create his
paintings.
41 James Faure-Walker, mail dated 20.08.02
23
4.0 Original Reproductions
In the light of technological development and global communication, this chapter re-
questions originality, authenticity, ownership and the concept of limited editions.
4.1 Originality and Authenticity
Debating originality is not a new discussion in the art world; copies were made by
hand in early days, legitimately or as a forgery. With the advent of print making
techniques using blocks, plates and stones, copying became easier. Historically,
prints were a reproductive medium and not until later seen as an artistic means of
expression. The development of photomechanical processes in the nineteenth
century made it possible to mechanically copy works of art.
Originality and authenticity were, in the twentieth century, debated also based on
other issues. Pablo Picasso copied African masks, and appropriation artist Mike
Bidlo copied Picasso, with e.g. Not Picasso 1988 - originally Mother and Child
(1921). Bidlo’s paintings are, however, always presented as Bidlo’s, and he argues
that everything has been done and all that is left for an artist now is recycling the art
of the past. Andy Warhol was also indifferent to originality in art, and his soup cans
and Marchel Duchamp’s Mr. Mutt are examples of ‘ready-made’ art.
Digital technology has, however, raised the question of originality in a totally
different way, since it is art designed for reproducibility. In a computer everything is
represented as numbers, binary digits (zeros and ones). It can therefore be argued
that the original of a digital image is the binary code, intangible and cannot be
24
perceived until reproduced by some electronical means - like on a monitor or as a
digital print.
Figure 9: Pedro Meyer, is she now mine?, www.zonezero.com
In the essay, 'The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction' (1936),42
Walter Benjamin states that 'aura' of art, based on uniqueness, scarcity and ritual,
is eliminated by mechanical reproduction and mass production. Instead of being
based on ritual, art begins to be based on another practice - politics. Art will
become more accessible and in short, be more democratic. The 'aura' and value
have, in recent years, been replaced by another ritual, the exhibition value.
Art produced by mechanical reproduction also lacks the ‘presence’ of the
original work according to Benjamin. A lack of presence, it can be argued, that
can partly be made up by the ability to be perceived in many places.
42 The original title was 'Das Kunstwerk im Zeitalter seiner technischen Reproduzierbarkeit', translated to English in 1968 as 'The Work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction'. Here from Harrison, Charles and Wood, Paul (ed), ART in Theory 1900 - 2000, New Edition, Oxford, Blackwell Publishers Ltd., 2003, page 520
25
The Internet and the World Wide Web are blurring the concept of ‘authenticity’ and
ownership. The Internett has also given geographically separated artists new ways to
collaborate, e.g. Exploding Cell 43 where a visitor to the web site could create an
'original' image by manipulating the initial image, place their own signature
alongside the artist's signature and print the result. Generation/Mutation44 is another
example, where artists all over the world were invited to choose an image, download
it to their own computer, modify it as they want and return it.
Figure 10: Concept by H-Ray Heine, Generation/Mutation, images modified by different artists
The digital opportunities combined with the increasing use of Internet and the web
brings art even closer to people and is even less authoritarian and more democratic
than Benjamin could anticipate. Can art created by use of digital technology then be
43 www.moma.org/onlineprojects/halley. Exploding Cell was created in 1996 by MoMA and artist Peter Halley. 44 www.digitalsouls.com. Generation/Mutation went online in 1998, and a new version (v.2.1) went online in March 2000. A number of interesting contributions have been received in 2002 as well.. 'H-Ray' Heine, mail dated 04.01.03.
26
unique and keep the 'aura'? It is possible, in my view, by having the digital image
transferred to a single canvas and thereafter deleting the digital file, then the art
perceived on the canvas will be the only and unique object of that art work.
4.2 Limited Editions
With today's digital printing, an image with the same colour and quality can be
printed on-demand, in as many 'originals' as wanted, with different size and on
different substrates. Artists now have an artistic and political choice, either making
the art really available to a broader audience, or make a limited edition for
commercial reasons.
Digital ink jet can be used to print both single images (monoprints), editions of
multiple 'originals' or open editions, without loss of quality. The 'rules' of traditional
printmaking can be applied including a print documentation record containing
information about the artist, the printmaker, the technique, the edition size, the file
cancellation method, paper and ink used and so on. A 'Certificate of Authenticity'45
can accompany every print with this information. The digital print is signed by the
artist, and numbering can follow the traditional rules with a 'trial proof' (TP), Bon à
Tirer (BAT) proof, 'presentation proof' and a 'cancellation proof'.
Some critics argue that there is nothing stopping a digital artist and/or printmaker
from making more copies before deleting the digital file. Although there are methods
45 Required in California, based on a law amended in 1988, www.mouniergiclee.com
27
to prevent such misuse, like paper watermarks and digital watermarks46, the only real
guarantee within new as well as traditional print techniques, is the artist's and
printmaker's honesty and integrity.
In spite of the connections with the reproductive trade the limited edition has become
associated with the original end of the market. The value of a print depends on,
amongst other things, whether it is a unique mono print, a limited edition, multiple
prints or if it perceived as mass-produced copies.
4.3 The Art Market
Having the possibility to produce high-quality images on-demand, the edition size
can solely be decided based on an evaluation of the potential sale. Every digital ink
jet is digitised, with the possibilities to create and market specific type of prints
towards different sectors of the society, marketing globally on the World Wide Web
and thereby increasing the potential market. It can then be argued that the reduced
exclusiveness of digitised artwork made available to the 'masses' through Internet
and reproduced by inkjet technology will be followed by a reduction in price. An
interesting question is whether a price reduction increase sales in such a way that it
will result in a higher income for the artist. As Ellen Rice states:
Giclée enables those who can't afford originals to still have beautiful, lasting art in their homes. It helps me also to support my work.47
James Faure-Walker's gallery representative points out, however, 'how a small
limited edition of Giclée prints was more appetising to the client'.48
46 Digital watermark is copyright information embedded into an image by use of a special software.
28
Digital technology also makes it possible for artists to test the market by printing a
few images before deciding on a full edition. The probable consequence is that more
prints, with a variable quality, will be available at the marketplace, and probably
lower the prices even more.
The value of an artwork depends, however, not only on the availability, but also
above all on the quality of the artwork and the marketing skills of the artist and
his/her representatives.49
4.4 Conclusion
Giclée and digital ink jet is the ultimate 'reproducible art' since it does not truly even
begin to exist until it has been 'reproduced'. Walter Benjamin points out that the lack
of 'presence' in reproducible art is made up somewhat by the reproduction’s ability
to be in several places at different times. Reproducible art can be energised by wide
distribution and affordable prices. Based on the increasing use of computers, Internet
and the World Wide Web art is now even closer to the people, artists and art works
have the possibility to come into people's home. I would argue that we are now on
the threshold of real democratised art.
An image being digitised, composed by the use of a computer, sent by Internet to
another artist who works further on the image, raises questions regarding which
image is the original and who owns the output.
47 Ellen Rice (USA, painter; www.ellenrice.com), mail dated 09.07.02 48 James Faure-Walker, mail dated 20.08.02
29
Digital ink jet gives new possibilities to the existing art market as well as opening
new markets, and digital ink jet can be a monoprint, a limited edition or an open
edition. The potential for large numbers of people to collect and appreciate artwork
created with a computer cannot be overlooked as a significant breakthrough for
artists and the art market.
49 See for example Walker, John A., Art in the Age of Mass Media, London, Pluto Press 2001, Third Edition
30
5.0 A shift towards digital print in future art Digital printmaking, not unlike photography and silkscreen in their infancy, has been
the target of scepticism. In this chapter it is examined if the scepticism is still
extensive, with the intention to evaluate if there is a shift towards digital print in Fine
Art. A shift is defined as a 'move or change or cause to move or change from one
position to another'50 or 'change of direction'51.
5.1 Artists and Digital ink jet
Historically artists have adopted or rejected new technology and new processes
according to their vision, ideas and expressive needs. Already in 1968 Jasia
Reichardt curated an exhibition called Cybernetic Serendipity at the Institute of
Contemporary Arts in London (I.C.A.), which explored and developed the
relationship between technology and creativity, forecasting the prospect of
outputting prints from a computer. Harold Cohen was another early entrepreneur
when he displayed a plotter creating non-representational line drawings at the Tate
Gallery in 1983, based on his mini-computer program called Aaron.
In the USA, Giclée and digital ink jet have developed at a faster pace than in Europe.
Major print studios are dealing exclusively in the creation of digital prints, like Muse
[X] Editions, established in 1995 'to meet the creative needs of the expanding
synergy between the worlds of contemporary fine art and digital technology'.52 To
get an indicator if a shift is occurring, digital print studios were asked who their
50 The Concise Oxford Dictionary, Tenth edition revised 2001, Oxford University Press 51 Longman Synonym Dictionary, Fifth impression 1990, Longman Group UK Limited
31
clients are, and the replies shows that both nationally as well as internationally well-
known artists use their digital print service.53
David Hockney, Roni Horn, Vinca Petersen, Stephen Shore, James Faure-Walker,
Catherine Yass, Sarah Lucas, Uta Barth, John Hilliard, Richard Hamilton, Matt
Collishaw, Julian Opie, Catherine Opie, Robert Rauschenberg and Peter Haley were
among the artists mentioned when museums and galleries were asked if they could
name some internationally well-known artists using the inkjet technology.
Artists and museums were also asked if they had received any negative reactions or
criticisms against Giclée or inkjet print. None of the museums responded that they
had received any negative reaction, but one third of the artists had. As Pedro Meyer
says: 'Very much so. Any change always creates a lot of negative reaction at first. It
goes with the territory.'54 Paul Jackson's view is that:
15 years ago, nobody knew what they were, …. Many galleries loved the look, but were slow to catch on to the true qualities.55
John Isaac experienced:
Many of the old school photography critics have told me that they are not for inkjet. But there are lots of new thinkers who love the inkjet media.56
Gerard Hemsworth 'have not received any criticism regarding the use of ink-jet, it was the right medium for the job.'57
52 Muse [X] Editions, www.musex.com 53 Only print studios in USA replied to the questionnaires. They have from 15 to 55 % clients being nationally known, and 10 to 15 % internationally known. The other clients are more locally known artists and some amateurs. 54 Pedro Meyer (Mexico/USA, photographer; www.zonezero.com), mail dated 11.07.02 55 Paul Jackson, mail dated 10.07.02 56 John Isaac, mail dated 09.08.02 57Gerard Hemsworth, mail dated 10.07.02
32
James Faure-Walker argues:
printmakers and gallery need to protect their territory. Ten years ago the objection was usually that it was machine rather than hand made, i.e. computer generated. Then it was about paper quality and permanence. Actually this is a boring issue now, because mainstream artists have been using Giclée for a while now.58
Figure 11: James Faure-Walker, Chair, Green and Cardboard, 2002, Giclée Iris print, www.dam.org
Even though there has been scepticism towards the use of digital technology among
artists and curators, an increasing number of internationally well-known artists are
using this technology to create and print art. As Stephen Shore says: 'Artists use
what works for them'.59
58 James Faure-Walker, mail dated 20.08.02 59 Stephen Shore, mail dated 30.09.02
33
5.2 Exhibitions
In the early 1990s, there were few exhibitions showing art created by digital
technology. Some entrepreneurs like Martin Reiser, who curated the The Electronic
Print exhibition in 1989 at the Arnolfini Gallery in Bristol, were active. More
recently Sue Gollifer has originated and curated ArCade I in 1995, the first open
International Exhibition of Electronic Fine Art Prints in Britain, and subsequently
ArCades II in 1998 and ArCades III in 2001. In the USA, Diana Michener's Solitaire
was exhibited at Pace MacGill Gallery in 1997, and at The Corcoran Gallery of Art
Gordon Parks retrospective Half Past Autumn was shown in 1998. At the 21st
International Biennial, at Ljubljana in Slovenia some computer prints were
represented in the exhibition, and they were given equal status to etchings,
lithographs and other original prints.
Figure 12: Barbara Rauch and Liz Chandler, Tete-a-Tete, Digital Responses, 2002, www.vam.uc.uk
From May 2002 till March 2003 the Design Now space in the 20th Century Gallery
at the Victoria & Albert Museum is turned into a digital laboratory. Eighteen artists
have been invited, and an on-line interactive exhibition digital>responses60 will
60 www.vam.ac.uk/vastatic/digitalresponses
34
show new works every month to mirror the changes in the actual exhibition. The
project is curated by Professor Paul Coldwell and is a contribution to a joint research
project, The Integration of Computers within Fine Art Practice, between Camberwell
College of Arts and Chelsea College of Art and Design. Artists working throughout
Britain at other centres of research including Goldsmiths, Gray's School of Art,
University of Lancashire, Wimbledon School of Art, University of Plymouth and
Norwich School of Art are included.
Since the beginning of the 1990's there has been an increase in exhibitions focusing
on digital art and print technology. Some galleries like Colville Place Gallery in
London specialise in exhibiting digital prints. There are also a growing number of
web galleries like www.londonart.co.uk, www.podgallery.com and www.dam.org.
5.3 Museums
In summer 2002 Tate Gallery had around 50 Giclée or ink jet works, Victoria &
Albert Museum around 12 with more acquisitions likely and Museum of Modern Art
in New York about 55 works - so far most of the art works are on paper. The
Summer Exhibition 2002 at Royal Academy of Art in London had 17 Giclée and
digital print works on display. While artists are gaining acceptance in certain
museums, others still resist digital prints. B. Allen Bayard, argues:
I thought I would see the most resistance from the general public. This is not the case, however. The galleries that previously carried my paintings and mixed media work are unwilling to carry my digitally composed and printed work. I also met resistance with a curator of a museum exhibition I was chosen to be in. Until she saw the work in person, she was biased against it. There have also been a few artist associates who tried to convince me that painting is better than images using a computer. I can report that, with the
35
exception of the galleries mentioned, the others have changed their minds once they saw my work in person.61
There is still a tendency for many collectors and printmakers to be cynical about
digital processes. The Museum of Modern Art states however, that:
digital processes and ink jet printing are becoming increasingly utilised by artists and increasingly accepted within the art world.62
and many US curators today will say:
Yes, I would purchase a digital print for our collection, but not because it is a digital print.63
Tate Britain has a policy on display or purchase that is not process led.
If a work is considered worthy of our attention then it is considered regardless of media.64
Figure 13: Julian Opie, Study for Wall at WAM, 2001, inkjet on paper, Worchester Art Museum, www.worcesterart.org
Instead of a question of media and technique, it is more a question about the
appropriateness of the technique, the quality of idea and materials chosen to support
the artist's vision. According to The Museum of Modern Art
Ink jet printing is by now fairly well accepted as just another tool or medium available for artists to use.65
61 B. Allen Bayard (USA, painter; www.babayard.com), mail dated 13.08.02 62 The Museum of Modern Art, NY, letter dated 13.08.02 63 Goddard, Stephen, 'Printmaking: Will the Center Hold?', www.in-print.org.uk 64 Tate Britain, mail dated 29.07.02 65 The Museum of Modern Art, NY, letter dated 13.08.02
36
This opinion is shared by Helena Chapellin Wilson who is a member of the
Committee on Photography at The Art Institute of Chicago, and on the acquisition
committee for the Museum of Contemporary Photography at Columbia College
Chicago.
My experience has been that the digital work from all media have been accessioned into museum collections.66
Southampton City Art Gallery informs that among others the Guggenheim, Museum
of Fine Arts, the Kennedy Centre for Performing Arts, the National Museum of
Mexico, the San Jose Museum and The British Museum have mounted exhibitions
or purchased Giclée/digital ink jet for their permanent collections. 67
5.4 Other shift indicators
Recently, the British Standards Institute (BSI), in collaboration with groups such as
the Royal Society of Painter-Printmakers, has included digital ink jet in its categories
of prints in section A.8. New Technology Processes. The Fine Art Trade Guild Court
approved a new print standard on 22nd of March 2001, incorporating Giclée
standards for the first time. The International Association of Fine Art Digital
Printmakers (IAFADP) offers information and working on standards for digital ink
jet. Originating in the States, it now has become a worldwide organisation and the
IAFADP Euro chapter was inaugurated in 1998.
The EU, through the European Commission's Culture 2000 initiative, supports a year
long project, 'The Digital Surface within Fine Art Practice', and Tate Britain will
host an international conference in summer 2003 to disseminate the results.
66 Helena Chapellin Wilson (Venezuela/USA, photographer, designer), mail dated 31.08.02 67 Southampton City Art Gallery, mail dated 24.07.02
37
Another element in evaluating how well digital ink jet and Giclée is accepted is how
the market accepts these works. According to Hunter Editions, USA, the Giclée
market is growing at more than 60 percent annually. In a $2.8 billion print market
dominated by lithographs and serigraphs, Giclée sales now total $160 million
annually.68 Brad Faine at Coriander studio in London says that the
future will be digital; already in our case, about twenty per cent of our turnover is created by inkjets.69
Sources report that, in the USA, approximately 80 % of new images are now being
produced by digital print technology with stagnation of traditional print methods,
especially lithographs and screen prints.70
PODGallery, however, predicts a different digital future and believes that:
digital prints are an interim solution to the formal problem of reproducibility which has hindered visual art in the last century or two. Ultimately, I believe that wall-mounted flat panel displays ("digital frames") will prove to be the real future of "prints".71
5.5 Conclusion
More then 70 years ago French poet Paul Valéry (1871 - 1945) predicted that:
In all arts there is a physical component which can no longer be considered or treated as it used to be, which cannot remain unaffected by our modern knowledge and power. We must expect great innovations to transform the entire technique of the arts, thereby affecting artistic invention itself and perhaps even bringing about an amazing change in our very notion of art.72
Digital technology is such a great innovation, and digital ink jet is used by an
increasing number of internationally well-known artists exhibiting and selling their
68 www.huntereditions.com 69 Brad Faine, www.in-print.org.uk 70 www.crabfish.com 71 PODGallery, mail dated 03.10.02
38
works. Even though there is still some scepticism among curators, it is evident that
internationally well-reputed museums and galleries accept and buy digital ink jet on
the same basis as other works of art. Furthermore, there are an increasing number of
digital exhibitions involving many artists as well as universities and other art
institutions. Organisations like British Standards Institute and Fine Art Trade Guild
have included standards for Giclée and digital ink jet prints.
As John Hilliard states:
in one form or another this imaging technology is very much with us, and visual artists will inevitably continue to make use of it.73
and Pedro Meyer asserts that 'IT is going to be the way Fine Art is going to be
printed.'74
Based on the discussion in this chapter it can be concluded that there has been a
change in direction during the last few years proving a shift towards digital print in
future art.
72 Paul Valéry, 'The Conquest of Ubiquity', here from www.dunkingbirdproductions.com, 'Digital Art: The Quest for Presence' 73 John Hilliard, letter dated 20.07.02 74 Pedro Meyer, mail dated 11.07.02. IT is abbreviation for 'Information Technology'.
39
6.0 Conclusion It is evident from the discussions in the previous chapters that Giclée and digital ink
jet have had, and will continue to have a significant impact on Fine Art. Digital
technology can be used to produce Giclée as a reproduction of art originally created
by traditional methods. The term 'digital ink jet' should be used for original artworks
created by the use of a computer and digital print technology.
Art is about ideas, and technology gives new possibilities for ideas. The medium has
always been closely linked to the idea and intention of the work. Digital technology
requires, however, another set of skills than those traditionally associated with being
an artist. Managing these skills opens up new process routes and enables new ways
of thinking, increasing the scope of art and contributes to its diversity.
An artwork is basically defined by its content, form and context. By use of digital
technology the content can be broaden by 'synthesising', hybridisation and global
collaboration between artists. The form of the image can be altered by new printing
possibilities and substrates, and the context widened by the use of global electronic
media.
The computer technique significantly speed up the process of moving an image from
the artist's mind to presentation. Digital technology offers the opportunity to
manipulate, control and re-digitise for further creative development. Digital images
have the potential to become 'indefinite images' open to revision, evolution,
40
collaborative manipulation and cross-disciplinary utilisation via the Internet. Images
can exist as both printed and electronic data. Virtual museums and galleries open
new opportunities for exhibiting, marketing and selling digital ink jet and Giclée.
The challenge now is to move on from the legacy of traditional art to a broader
definition of its possibilities, creating a synergy between old and new processes,
opening new areas of freedom and diversity. Instead of replacing traditional media, it
seems that digital technologies are giving some of these media new life and
encourages new process routes.
Giclée and digital ink jet can be regarded as a print, a photograph or as a painting
depending on the artist’s vision and intention. In the evolving development of digital
technology, artworks can now be duplicated, distributed, and transformed quickly
and easily. Rules and regulations cannot fully resolve the complex issue of
originality, authenticity and ownership that digital art raise.
Walter Benjamin's essay 'The work of Art in the Age of Mechanical Reproduction' is
essential when discussing the consequences of reproducible art. It can be argued that
with digital print there is no physical original, and digital print might be seen as the
ultimate reproducible art, having a 'presence' both as a physical object and virtually
on the World Wide Web. The 'aura' has diminished, and with Internet and World
Wide Web there is a possibility of real democratised art. The concept of limited
editions and the art market are also influenced by the ability to print unlimited
numbers with the same high quality.
41
Digital ink jet is being used by many internationally known artists, exhibited and
bought by internationally well reputed museums and galleries, accepted by
international standards and taught at many art schools all over the world. Based on
these facts it is evident that there is a shift towards digital print in future Fine Art.
Figure 14: Mamata Herland, Where to?, 2002, Digital ink jet on canvas
42
7.0 Bibliography
Books and Articles
1. Ang, Tom. Digital Photography, London, Mitchell Beazley, 1999
2. Barfield, N., Barfield, R. and Whale, G. 'Defying Convention: Emergent Practices in Digital Printing', Point: Art and Design Research Journal, vol. 1, no. 12, (2001), pp. 4-14.
3. Barnier, John (ed). Coming into Focus, San Francisco, Chronicle Books, 2000
4. Coldwell, Paul and Rauch, Barbara curators of Interrogating the surface. The nature of surface within digital printmaking, 2001, CD
5. Crook, Jo and Learner, Tom. The impact of MODERN PAINTS, London, Tate Gallery Publishing, 2000
6. Daly, Tim. The Digital Printing Handbook, A photographer's guide to creative printing techniques, London, Argentum, 2002
7. Exhibition Catalogue. Computers and Printmaking 18th September - 5th December 1999, Birmingham Museums and Art Gallery
8. Exhibition Catalogue. Royal Academy Illustrated 2002, Royal Academy of Arts, 2002
9. Exhibition Catalogue. Royal Academy of Arts, Summer Exhibition 2002, List of Works, Royal Academy of Arts, 2002
10. Gleuck, Grace, 'Marcel Duchamp: “Duchamp's Replications. Duchamp's Replications.”', Art Reveiw, New York Times. 22nd October 1999
11. Harrison, Charles and Wood, Paul (ed), ART in Theory 1900 - 2000, New Edition, Oxford, Blackwell Publishers Ltd., 2003
12. Henry Wilhelm, Wilhelm Imaging Research, Inc., The Intimate Relationships of Inks and Papers: You Can't Talk About the Permanence of One Without Considering the Other. A lecture at PhotoPlus Expo, New York City - October 29, 1999
13. Lambert, Susan. PRINTS, Art and Techniques, London, V&A Publications, 2001
14. Langdon, Helen. Art Galleries of the World, London, Pallas Athene, 2002
15. Lovejoy, Margot, POST MODERN CURRENTS, Art and Artists in the Age of Electronic Media, Prentice Hall, USA, 1997, Second edition
43
16. Meecham, Pam and Sheldon, Julie. Modern Art: A Critical Introduction, London, Routledge, 2000
17. Mel Hunter Graphics, PRINT thoughts - vol I, no 1 (Jan 1995 - as amended 02/01/2001) - vol I, no 2 (July 1995) - vol I, no 4 (Nov. 1995) - vol II, no 2 (April 1997)
18. Negroponte, Nicholas, being digital, Coronet Books, Hodder and Stoughton, London, 1995
19. Palmer, Judith. 'Name your price', Printmaking Today, vol. 11, no. 3, (2002), pp 26-28.
20. Walker, John A., Art in the Age of Mass Media, London, Pluto Press 2001, Third Edition
21. Whale, G. and Barfield, N. 'Digital Printmaking', Point: Art and Design Research Journal, vol. 1, no. 4, (1997), pp. 53-57.
22. Whale, G. and Barfield, N. 'Diversity in Digital Print', Printmaking Today, vol. 11 , no. 2, (2002), pp. 30-31.
23. Whale, George and Barfield, Naren. Digital Printmaking, London. A & C Black 2001
44
Supporting sources Letters and emails with questions regarding Giclée and ink jet print were, during July - September 2002, sent to: • Artists • Museums and Galleries • Print Studios • Printer, ink and substrate suppliers • Universities, authors and other sources as part of the research for this dissertation. The received responses are the main sources for further research at the Internet, as well as suggested books and magazine articles. Copy of the received responses is presented in Appendices 1 - 4. Appendices 1: Artist Response, page 53
Abrahams, Ivor Bayard, B. Allen Chapellin Wilson, Helena Golden, Helen Hemsworth, Gerard Hilliard, John Isaac, John Jackson, Paul
Faure-Walker, James Kerslake, Kenneth A. Krause, Dorothy Simpson Lortie, Bret Meyer, Pedro
Rice, Ellen Shore, Stephen Warner, Nicholas
Appendices 2: Museum and Gallery Response, page 83 British Museum
Digital Art Museum, www.dam.org Germäldegalerie, Berlin
Kunstmuseum Bern Louisiana Museum of Modern Art, Denmark Manchester Art Gallery Musée dÀrt Louvre, Paris
Musée dÀrt Moderne de la Ville de Paris Museum for Samtidskunst, Norway Museum of Contemporary Art, Chicago
Museum of Modern Art, NY National Gallery of Canada National Gallery, UK National Museum of Women in the Arts, USA New Orleans Museum of Art
PODGallery, www.podgallery.com Royal Academy of Art Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art Southampton City Art Gallery Tate Britain The Dia Center for the Arts Vancouver Art Gallery Victoria & Albert Museum
45
Appendices 3: Print Studios & Suppliers Response, page 109 ColorSpan, Europe
EPic Digital Technology, USA Flaar Digital Imaging Technology Center Hunter Editions, USA IJ Technologies, USA Mel Hunter Graphics, USA Nash Editions, USA OCE, Norway Branch
One World Art, USA Tara materials, USA Triangle Coating, USA
Appendices 4: Response from other resources, page 132
Bamberger, Alan; Artbusiness.com Barnier, John; author
Codwell, Paul; Professor Camberwell College of Art Daly, Tim; author
Goddard, Stephen; Former president of Print Council of America Gollifer, Sue; Lecturer at University of Brighton Harden, Mike; The Artchive Holger 'H-Ray' Heine, Generation/Mutation Jackson, Alana; Chroniclebooks Kushner, Marily; Curator at Brooklyn Museum Labadie, John Antoine; Professor at university of North Carolina, Museum of Computerart Preeper, Jerry; Printcollecting.com Shay, Christopher; The New Yorker Magazine Sims, Mike & Desmet, Anne; Printmaking Today Werner Sorensen, Bjarne; Former chairman of Danske Grafikere Whale, George; author
46
Internet sources The below Internet sites have been accessed during August - October 2002. 1. International Fine Print Dealers Association, IFPDA
www.printdealers.com
2. In-Print; evolution in contemporary printmaking www.in-print.org.uk Atkinston, Conrad. 'Unique Reproductions'
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Bayard, B. Allen. 'DIGITAL ART' 'THE ART ASPECT. Musings on digital art'
11. Camberwell College of Arts www.camb.linst.ac.uk
12. Camberwell College of Arts, The Integration of Computers within Fine Art Practice www.research.linst.ac.uk/integration/
13. The London Institute www.linst.ac.uk
14. LondonArt www.londonart.co.uk
15. PODGallery www.podgallery.com
Mutch, Kevin. 'POD Theory'
16. Victoria & Albert Museum www.vam.ac.uk
17. Victoria & Albert Museum, digital>responses www.vam.ac.uk/vastatic/digitalresponses www.vam.ac.uk/vastatic/dig_resp_flyer
18. Worchester Art Museum, www.worcesterart.org
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19. Okanagan University College, USA www.ouc.bc.ca
20. The Centre for Fine Print Research / Faculty of Art Media and Design www.uwe.ac.uk/research/cfpr/
21. Printmaking Department / Loughborough University School of Art and Design
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22. Spencer Museum of Art, University of Kansas www.ukans.edu/~sma/prints.html
23. Digital Printing & Imaging Association www.dpia.org
24. Muse [X] Editions www.musex.com
25. The Fine Art Trade Guild www.fineart.co.uk
Colin Ruffell, 'Commercial giclee printing facilities for the self-publishing artist or gallery in the U.K.'.
26. Art World News www.artworldnews.com
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27. Museum of Computer Art www.museumofcomputerart.com
Labadie, John Antoine. 'Printmaking: a digital perspective' Labadie, John Antoine & Steeds, Ralph Lee. 'Printmaking: traditions and new trends' Labadie, John Antoine. 'The New Media Soup' Jarvis, JD & Labadie, John Antoine. 'Digital Art, Where Art Thou?' Labadie, John Antoine. 'Some thoughts on IT in 2001: In the arts ... and beyond'
28. American Print Alliance www.printalliance.org
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Jarvis, JD. 'Digital art in Focus: An Overview, past, Present and Future'
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30. Crown Point Press
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31. Flaar Digital Imaging Technology Center www.large-format-printers.org www.fineartgicleeprinters.org
'Which Wide Format Inkjet Printer Are capable of producing Fine Art Giclée Prints?' - January 2002 'Which Wide Format Printer is a good choice when you need exhibit-quality photo-realistic prints for an art museum?' - February 2002 'IRIS Model 3047G' - May 2001 'Suggested Standards for Evaluation og RIPs for Wide Format Inkjet Printers' - May 2002 'Media and Inks for Fine Art Giclée and Photo Realistic Quality' - August 2001
32. ArtBusiness www.artbusiness.com
33. 'Exploding Cell' www.moma.org/onlineprojects/halley
34. 'Generation/Mutation' www.digitalsouls.com
35. The American Society of Media Photographers www.ct.asmp.org
36. Crabfish www.crabfish.com
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37. Inkjetart.com www.inkjetart.com
38. ArtPrintOnCanvas.com www.artprintoncanvas.com
39. Apogee Photo Magazine
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O`Beirne, Victor. 'The Digital World: An Insider's View' 40. Digital Images and Printing
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Schippling, Michael. 'Doing Digital Images. A brief introduction to PC based photo/image editing and printing'
41. Hutcheson Consulting www.hutchcolor.com
42. Luminous Landscape
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43. The Artchive www.artchive.com
44. Art in Context www.artincontext.org www.artincontext.org/listing/artist/alpha/menu/htm
45. ConeStudio www.cone-editions.com
46. Sutton Graphics www.sutongraphics.com
47. Hunter Editions www.huntereditions.com
48. The Visual Artist www.visual-artists.com
49. Finer Image Editions www.finerimage.com
50. ArtCafe www.artcafe.net
51. Stapels Fine Art www.stapelsart.com
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52. Big Trees Editions www.bigtreeseditions.com
53. Giclée Fine Art www.efineartonline.com
54. MWORDS www.mwords.co.uk
55. The Stock Solution www.tssphoto.com
56. Koshgall www.koshgall.com
57. digital-photography.org www.digital-photography.org
58. Curry`s www.currys.com
59. World Printmakers www.worldprintmakers.com
60. Gordongallery.com www.gordongallery.com
61. Sunshine Artist www.sunshineartist.com
Dardine, Kate. 'Solving the Giclée Puzzle' 62. Minds Island
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63. Find Articles www.findarticles.com
'Digital Printing Creates Boom in Fine Art' 64. Digital Art Museum
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Faure-Walker, James. 'Artist statement' Dietrich, Frank. 'The Computer: a Tool for Thought-Experiments'
65. Micro Publishing News
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