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All About Prints is a documentary that invites novices and experienced collectors alike to explore the art of printmaking from the perspective of influential curators, collectors, dealers, printmakers, and artists.
Shot in Hi-Def video at museum print rooms, print fairs, galleries, and print workshops in America and Europe, All About Prints explores the collaborative nature of printmaking, the democratic character of multiples, and the deep-rooted traditions of the art form. These ideas come to life through the exploration of masters of the 19th century like Homer and Whistler; the important contribution of Edward Hopper; the influence of Mexican muralists; the formative years of the Federal Art Project of the WPA; the excitement of the 60's print boom; and the ever-evolving techniques of contemporary artists such as Kiki Smith who carry on the tradition.
Narrated by Juliet Stevenson.
| Catalog Number: MC-1076 |
Type: Feature |
Genre: Art / Artist |
| Copyright: 2009 |
Length: 54 minutes |
Format:
DVD Region: 0 |
| TV System: NTSC |
ISBN: |
UPC/EAN: 880198107695 |
| Label: National Gallery of Art, Washington |
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This is a Microcinema Exclusive title.
Wholesale Purchasing:
Program MC-1076 is available for wholesale from Microcinema DVD. Contact info[at]microcinema.com or call at +1-415-447-9750
Exhibition:
Microcinema is not authorized to represent this title for exhibition. Write us for this contact information.
2010-05-10 Educational Media Reviews Online By Sebastian Derry
Printmaking encompasses a variety of techniques but the basic process has remained unchanged since its origin: the image to be printed is first drawn, etched, or engraved onto a surface, and then coloring (ink, paint, oil) is applied to that surface; finally, paper is pressed to the surface to create the print.
The video opens at the International Fine Print Dealers Association Print Fair, held annually in New York City. Various art dealers, art experts and enthusiasts, and printmakers share their passion for printmaking, thus setting the tone for the entire film.
The history of printmaking is explored in a concise yet cogent manner, highlighting major artists and eras, all the while revealing specific techniques and how they have evolved over time, including up to the present day.
The DVD menu includes easy access to the specific printmaking techniques covered: woodcut, engraving, etching, lithography, and silkscreen, greatly facilitating its classroom or instructional use.
This is another winner from Microcinema, and is easily the single best video on the subject of printmaking—an essential purchase for any collection.
| 2010-01-26 dvdtalk.com By Casey Burchby
All About Prints is a compact and informative short documentary that covers the basics of printmaking across a variety of media. This program will be of interest to artists, curators, collectors, or to anyone mystified by the catchall term "print." Printmaking encompasses a wide variety of processes that use different methods, materials, and equipment to achieve a vast array of visual effects.
We begin with woodcuts - a relatively simple matter of carving an image onto one side of a wood block and covering the areas to be printed with ink. The next major print-related development used copper plates, which allowed for a number of variant processes such as engraving, etching, and aquatints. Copper plate processes use acid to burn lines into the metal, which are then filled with ink to form the basis of the printed image. Lithography and screen-printing are nominally easier and faster processes that require less sophisticated materials and equipment.
Beyond this overview of printmaking, the film takes a look at pivotal moments for the print in art history. From Dürer's mastery of woodcuts to the spread of engravings in the 17th and 18th centuries, down to Robert Rauschenberg learning to separate newsprint from newspaper using lighter fluid, we see the development of techniques that meet the evolution of subject matter that artists have addressed through their art.
Interview subjects include artists such as Kiki Smith and Will Barnet, curators past and present from the Whitney and the Museum of Modern Art, collectors, and gallerists. The influence of Depression-era artists from Mexico and the United States is discussed in detail, as this was an important moment during which government work galvanized print-makers and allowed for the fast production and dissemination of their art.
Over a relatively short 54-minute running time, All About Prints effectively hits the high points of printmaking, covering about 500 years of art history without skipping over the details and nuances that make prints themselves interesting in the first place.
The DVD
The Video and Audio
Microcinema presents the feature in an enhanced 1.78:1 transfer that really shines. Shot and edited with economy and skill, the image is rock-solid, which is no surprise for an hour-long feature that has a single disc all to itself. Contrast is excellent and blacks are solid. The audio is crystal clear stereo, abetted by a pleasant original music score.
The Extras
There are no bonus features.
Final Thoughts
This program will give viewers a new appreciation for such heretofore mysterious terms such as "mezzotint" and "drypoint." All About Prints efficiently examines the interesting and somewhat unsung art of printmaking. The variety of processes and effects available to the dedicated printmaker are surprisingly vast. Recommended.
| 2010-01-01 blogcritics.org By Jack Goodstein
Back in the day the stereotypical image associated with artistic prints was more than likely that of the rich old roué inviting the naïve young object of his less than honorable intentions to see his etchings. It is a comic image which is very much given the lie by Christopher Noey's new documentary, All About Prints, available on DVD for The Print Research Foundation. Indeed, it is perhaps the central thesis of the film that the essential unifying characteristic of the various forms grouped together in the generic category of print is the democratic appeal of these forms in terms of both their audiences and their messages.
The various print processes gave the artist the ability to replicate his artistic vision over and over again, and since these prints could be produced in multiple copies, they could be made available to many more people. Since they could be produced more economically, they could be made available more cheaply over a wider range of social strata. Art need not cater solely to the wealthy patrons and the upper classes.
Moreover as print processes changed and expanded, as new processes developed, they became easier to use, requiring less technical expertise on the part of the artist and assuring that the works could reach ever greater masses. Expanding audiences, new audiences were more willing to look favorably on new ideas expressed in new ways. They were excited by new ways to look at the celebrity culture as depicted in an Andy Warhol silk screen of a Marilyn Monroe. They were open to Roy Lichtenstein's comic strip panel lithographs. They were not frightened by the revolutionary presentation of working men and women, of the proletariat, in the work of radical Mexican artists like Jose Orozco and Diego Rivera.
While this democratization of the artistic subject matter can be most clearly seen in the 20th century, it is evident as well in the work of earlier artists. Although not necessarily all discussed in the DVD, one thinks of the engravings of William Hogarth in England, the poster art of Henri Toulouse Lautrec in France, and Hablot Knight Browne's illustrations for Dickens. Prints of all kinds were making great art about the people, often for the people, as well as by the people.
The DVD includes clear explanations of the various processes by which each of the different print genres are produced. These are delivered with authority by Antony Griffiths, the Keeper of Prints at the British Museum in London. For example, woodcuts, the earliest of the print genres, are produced by gouging out a block of wood to leave a relief image which will form the surface to be printed. This surface is covered with ink and that image is transferred to the paper. Etchings, on the other hand, are produced by covering a copper plate with wax and using a steel needle to draw an image through the wax. An acid bath is used to eat away the exposed needle lines. These are then coated with ink and used to print the image. Similar explanations are given for all of the print techniques. The DVD menu conveniently offers a menu to allow the viewer to play individual sections devoted to each of the more important print genres.
Interviews with contemporary artists involved in print creation as well as film footage of earlier artists are complemented by art historians, collectors, and gallery owners. Among those providing commentary are artists Will Barnet, Joanne Greenbaum, and Donald Sultan; David Kiehl, Curator of Prints at the Whitney Museum of American Art and Deborah Wye, Chief Curator of Prints at MOMA. There are auctioneers thrilled over the price for a Hopper print fetched at an auction at Christies. There is a gallery owner discussing the importance of Paul Revere's Boston Massacre engraving. There is artist Kiki Smith explaining how she really didn't quite know what she was doing when she made her first print. And not only prints, there is footage of Jackson Pollock tossing paint and Diego Rivera painting murals. Still the glory of the film is the prints: beautifully photographed, it provides high definition views of the work of a litany of the great print makers: Durer and Rembrandt, Whistler and Picasso, Hopper and Rauschenberg, to name a few.
At 54 minutes the film is an ideal introduction to a wide variety of artistic genres, a cornucopia of styles and a bevy of major artists of all types. It is by no means an exhaustive study. It was not meant to be one. It is a film to whet the appetite. It is a film that will send you to the library, to the museum, to your local gallery. It is a film that will get you looking for more.
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