The intent of that name was to distinguish commonly known industrial "Iris proofs" from the type of fine art prints artists were producing on those same types of printers. The name was originally applied to fine art prints created on Iris printers in a process invented in the early 1990s but has since come to mean any high quality ink-jet print and is often used in galleries and print shops to denote such prints.
Usage
Beside its association with Iris prints, in the past few years, the word ?gicl'e,? as a fine art term, has come to be associated with prints using fade-resistant "archival" inks (including solvent inks) and the inkjet printers that use them. These printers use the CMYK color process but may have multiple cartridges for variations of each color based on the CcMmYK color model (e.g. light magenta and light cyan inks in addition to regular magenta and cyan) which serves to increase the apparent resolution and color gamut and allows smoother gradient transitions. The most common printers used are models from manufacturers such as Canon, Eastman Kodak, Epson, Hewlett-Packard, ITNH Ixia, Mimaki, Mutoh, ColorSpan, and Roland DGA. A wide variety of substrates are available including various textures and finishes such as matte photo paper, watercolor paper, cotton canvas, or artist textured vinyl. Indeed, a new industry has been created in supplying the media for this emerging market.
Applications
Artists tend to use these types of inkjet printing processes commonly called "Gicl'e" to make reproductions of their original two-dimensional artwork, photographs or computer generated art. Professionally produced inkjet prints are much more expensive on a ?per print? basis than the traditional four color offset lithography process originally used to make such reproductions (a large format inkjet can cost more than $50 a print, not including scanning and color correction, as opposed to $5 a print for a four-color offset litho of the same image printed in a run of 1000). However, since the artist does not need to pay for, market and store large print runs, and since the artist can print and sell each print individually to match demand, inkjet printing is used as an economical alternative to producing large runs of four color offset prints. Inkjet printing has the added advantage of allowing the artist to control every aspect of the image, its color and the substrate printed on, and even allows the artist to own and operate the printer itself.
Digital art most commonly refers to art created on a computer in digital form. Digital art can be purely computer-generated, such as fractals,and algorithmic art or taken from another source, such as a scanned photograph, or an image drawn using vector graphics software using a mouse or graphics tablet. Though technically the term may be applied to art done using other media or processes and merely scanned in, it is usually reserved for art that has been non-trivially modified by a computing process (such as a computer program, microcontroller or any electronic system capable of interpreting an input to create an output); digitized text data and raw audio and video recordings are not usually considered digital art in themselves, but can be part of a larger project. In an expanded sense, "digital art" is a term applied to contemporary art that uses the methods of mass production or media.
Digital Art Canvas Prints
It seems to be a generally held perception that digital art, whether it is photography of the real world, or manipulation of reality, can be made by anyone? and therefore, why should you pay for it! Digital art has its own special skills required ? fusing technical expertise with craftsmanship is not easy! And you can see so much of the artist in the art, just like you can in a painting, or a sculpture.
You see fears, dreams, hopes, random thoughts, and the world as another person views it, just as much as Michelangelo or Picasso showed us these hallways in their own minds. If you can break down this barrier in your own mind, you will be opening yourself up to a whole new world of art, seeing beauty in the straight line and form in the cursor's movement?
Unfortunately, not everyone has the facilities to be able to buy a great camera, an excellent computer, a copy of Photoshop and enrol themselves in a course to learn how to use it. If everybody did, nobody would have this concept, that art comes from money! We will have to look at several parallel arguments, and extrapolate the original ones, to see if the conclusions we come to are still true?
If you are a parent, do you think you are good at your job? Do you think you are raising well-balanced kids, and you have a good understanding of their needs and their psyche? I hope you do! Now, did you do a course in child psychology? Have you read many books on parenting and child psychology? Do you have the money to provide everything they need, and would be great for their future development?
You may not, but we would never suggest that makes you a ?fake' parent ? that would be unfair. Parenting, like art, is not about money ? it is about something a bit deeper within, that comes a little more from your soul than your hip pocket. In the same vein, technical skills cannot be substituted for by money (in the form of good equipment).
David White agrees: ?I think that most of us ascribe attributes, mistakenly in a lot of cases, to people based upon their possessions, whether it is automobiles or cameras' (White, 2006). If you do a bit of cooking, do you think that you could make your favourite dishes just as well in an oven without a digital timer and thermostat control? Would losing your electric whisk make you a bad cook? We certainly don't think so ? we appreciate that the art of cooking is more about an instinct for flavour and texture, than the means you use to get to the end.
So, if having the best equipment doesn't make somebody better at something, it follows that having worse than usual equipment shouldn't dampen someone's creativity, either. Van Gogh, along with many other artists, was not well-recognized in his time, and therefore he was not rich! He could not necessarily buy the best quality paints, or even enough paint to always have unmixed colors.
He could not necessarily buy high-quality canvas to materialize his vision ? although this may have changed the dimensions of it slightly. Yet, he is now one of the most recognized and appreciated artists of the last centuries. His equipment had no bearing on his art ? the feelings we get looking at his paintings and prints come from something other than the fibre ratios of his canvas, and the chemical composition of his paints.
Digital art requires a whole different set of artistic skills ? you don't necessarily need a delicate touch to mix colors, but you need an excellent eye to judge how the colors you click on will affect your work. You don't need an awe-inspiring setting, but your mind needs to be in that awe-inspiring place, nevertheless.
You do still need to be a great judge of a model, and you do still need what so many of us mere mortals lack, which is an eye for balance, and intimate knowledge of how our mind works. When you know how people will perceive something, you know how to challenge it. You must be able to define beauty to create it.
JD Jarvis agrees that digital art is unique as an artistic genre. He explains how digital art can seem a little mundane, since we only have the same old words that we have always used to describe it. We use these words to help it become accepted, to lessen people's fear of new and different things, but? ?Such shortcomings in our use of language to describe digital imaging processes demonstrate, if nothing else, how unique these tools and their results truly are' (Jarvis, 2006).
If they cannot be properly described, they must be truly new, truly groundbreaking, and not just something any schmoe with a computer can do! ?Here, on the flat surface of the digital print, the aesthetics of mimicry, simulation, facsimile and illusion become even more important' (Jarvis, 2006) .These are all new skills, which you need to make people feel something through your art?
If we could, we would invite everybody around, to give you a rundown of our programs, lend you our equipment and send you off to create some great art ? we are sure that, not only would you come back with some gems among the rubble, but you would have a much better understanding of the vision it takes to uncover and form those gems!
Both Kaloyan-veselinov Banev & Domen Lombergar are contributors for EditorialToday. The above articles have been edited for relevancy and timeliness. All write-ups, reviews, tips and guides published by EditorialToday.com and its partners or affiliates are for informational purposes only. They should not be used for any legal or any other type of advice. We do not endorse any author, contributor, writer or article posted by our team.
Kaloyan-veselinov Banev has sinced written about articles on various topics from Beauty Procedure, Home Management and Car Rental. Canvas Republic is original manufacturers and innovators of and contemporary. Kaloyan-veselinov Banev's top article generates over 246000 views. to your Favourites.
Domen Lombergar has sinced written about articles on various topics from Bodybuilding Supplements, Fitness and Hair Care. Lombergar is a modern artist now creating solely . To learn more about about art visit his. Domen Lombergar's top article generates over 550000 views. to your Favourites.
Cholesterol And Triglyceride Levels There you have it, concentrate your efforts on keeping your cholesterol triglyerides low by eating less processed fats, less processed foods, exercising throughout the day, and eating more fiber. Bio...