printmaking

listen to the pronunciation of printmaking
الإنجليزية - التركية
Baskı resim, makina resmi: Sanatsal resim çalışmalarının farklı malzemelere çeşitli tekniklerle kalıplar hazırlanarak özel makinalardan geçirilmesiyle oluşturulan resim çalışmalarının genel adı
printmaker
{i} grafiker
printmaker
(isim) grafiker
الإنجليزية - الإنجليزية
The field of art concerned, roughly, with the transferal of ink or paint from a plate or block or through a screen mesh to paper
artistic design and manufacture of prints as woodcuts or silkscreens
The art of using a printing plate or stamp to create one or a series of multiple originals called prints
The art or technique of making prints, especially as practiced in engraving, etching, drypoint, woodcut, serigraphy, etc
The transferring of an inked image from one surface (from the plate or block) to another (usually paper)
Printmaking is an artistic technique which consists of making a series of pictures from an original, or from a specially prepared surface. Art form consisting of the production of images, usually on paper but occasionally on fabric, parchment, plastic, or other support, by various techniques of multiplication, under the direct supervision of or by the hand of the artist. Such fine prints are considered original works of art, even though they can exist in multiple copies. The major techniques are relief printing, where the background is cut away, leaving a raised image; intaglio printing, where the image is incised directly into the plate; surface printing such as lithography, where the image is painted or drawn onto a stone; and stencil printing, where the design is cut out and printed by spraying paint or ink through the stencil. The history of printmaking parallels the history of art and is one of the oldest art forms. Though he had several predecessors, the first important engraver was a 15th-century German, Martin Schongauer. In the 16th century Albrecht Dürer created prints of the highest quality, and in the 17th century the etchings of Rembrandt were especially fine. Japanese printmaking originated in the 17th century with the ukiyo-e school of woodcuts; the best-known artists were Hokusai and Hiroshige. Important 18th-century Western artists who made prints include William Hogarth, Francisco Goya, and Giambattista Piranesi. Among the works of 19th-century printmakers, those of Honoré Daumier and of many of the French Impressionists are notable. Experimentation in new styles and new directions proliferated in the 20th century, with artists from the century's major movements including Expressionism, Surrealism, Pop art, Minimalism, and Neo-Expressionism all pursuing printmaking. See also engraving; etching; mezzotint; woodcut
Any process by which an image is transferred from a matrix (plate, screen or block where the image is prepared,) to a print Prints are usually made with a printing press that evenly applies pressure to bring the matrix and the print together There are several basic printmaking techniques including lithography, serigraphy, etching, giclee, and more
printmaker
one who makes prints: copies of works of art
printmaker
{i} printer, one who produces printed material
printmaker
an artist who designs and makes prints