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Wednesday, March 12, 2008
Print Hints
Posted by sarah
Where's the best place in the whole wide world to buy prints? According some, it's
The London Original Print Fair
. Here's the skinny on this year's fair:
The London Original Print Fair, the longest-running specialist print fair in the world, will be celebrating 23 years at the Royal Academy of Arts. Once again, the Fair is larger than ever and covers all periods of printmaking from the early woodcuts of Dürer and his contemporaries to the graphic work of contemporary masters such as Hockney and Hirst.
The Fair takes place in Burlington Gardens, April 23-27, 2008. Tickets are available at the door, prices start at a pretty reasonable £200 ($404.50) and all work is for sale. The hubbub on this year's extravaganza is a special collection of Warhol prints and related drawings.
If you've ever had questions about prints ("what is a print?" for example), check out the fair's rather charming
"about prints"
page. Here's a sample:
Prints have played an important role in the history of art. Before the invention of photography, it was through engravings that many people were able to become familiar with great works of art which would otherwise have been inaccessible. This tradition of bringing paintings to a wider public dates back to the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, when many artists employed engravers to reproduce their work. Hogarth recreated many of the images from his paintings in engravings; Picasso was a prolific printmaker in the media of etching, lithography and linocut. Some of Matisse’s best known images are his simple lithographs and stencils. Other artists whose important works include prints are Dürer, Canaletto, Tiepolo, Goya, Piranesi, Munch, Toulouse-Lautrec, Whistler, Sickert, Warhol, Freud, Hodgkin and Hockney.
Featured Above
: Intimate Relations: Safety Pin
(screenprint, 2001) by
Michael Craig-Martin
Shows and Events
3/12/2008 12:30:20 PM (Eastern Daylight Time, UTC-04:00)
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