Details
Description
Nighthawks, Edward Hopper, The Art and the Artist Poster, Gallery Poster, 1981
Continuous Tone (No Dots) Lithographic Museum Exhibition Poster
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Nighthawks, Edward Hopper, The Art and the Artist Poster, Gallery Poster, 1981
Continuous Tone (No Dots) Lithographic Museum Exhibition Poster
26 1/2 × 38 in
67.3 × 96.5 cm
This a Continuous Tone Lithographic Poster Published by the Art Institute of Chicago and printed by Black Box Collotype, the last remaining press in the United States that was still using this type of printing. Please do not confuse this with the myriad of cheap reproductions, this is the original poster printed at the time of the exhibition at the Art Institute Of Chicago. It is on very thin paper that does not seem to scuff, thus there are some minor handling creases, and the poster has been stored for over 38 years.
About the Continuous Tone Printing Process:
Screenless lithography, by eliminating the use of halftone screens and halftone dots achieves extraordinary fidelity, fullness of tone, color and detail, impressive color saturation and clear line resolution. Museums, fine artists and publishers with exacting standards use this remarkable process to re-create their finest works of art. Continuous tone lithography (as in a photograph with no dots) evolved from collotype printing. When Black Box Collotype ultimately closed its doors in 2004, it was one of just a few printers left in the world that had mastered the collotype process. While it was a highly desirable reproduction process for the fine art world, it was a laborious, time consuming (read “expensive”) process. Since there was no screen involved, a collotype print could be 27 colors without fear of a moiré. But in the old days, on Black Box’s one-unit press, those 27 colors had to be laid down one color at a time. So the most complex jobs could take months to complete.
Offset lithography is far faster and less expensive than collotype. Suddenly, four colors and halftone dot patterns were “good enough” because they were so economical. Black Box Collotype was one of the last printing houses in America, if not the world that used the collotype-continuous tone process.
Medium: Reproduction
Condition: Very Good Original Condition, Paper and Colors look like it was printed this morning not over 38 years ago.
Signature: Not Signed, not signed
Frame: Not included
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- Dimensions
- 38ʺW × 0.1ʺD × 26.5ʺH
- Art Subjects
- Cityscape
- Frame Type
- Unframed
- Period
- 1980s
- Country of Origin
- United States
- Item Type
- Vintage, Antique or Pre-owned
- Materials
- Lithograph
- Condition
- Mint Condition, No Imperfections
- Color
- Black
- Condition Notes
- Very Good Original Condition, Paper and Colors look like it was printed this morning not over 38 years ago. Minor … moreVery Good Original Condition, Paper and Colors look like it was printed this morning not over 38 years ago. Minor soft crease lower border will not be noticeable when framed up. less
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