Anon

Lithography For Artists


Скачать книгу

Bellows would agree with their transatlantic brethren.

      And I agree with them; but not because I do not know how to value transfer. I am an expert transferrer, and in this book the operation is taught; but as an artist I work almost exclusively on stone. Mr. Pennell, on the other hand (as also, for the most part, Whistler), draws not on stone but on paper, and the prints are transfers. Fantin-Latour’s work is a mixture of crayon-stone, transfer, and white-line engraving.

      For going somewhat into these matters there are several reasons. A leading print dealer said to me that lithography was handicapped in that “the artists are too lazy to draw on stone.” A very important exhibition refused to let me catalogue my prints as drawn on stone. Certain interests are advantaged by keeping this distinction away from the public, the collectors, the critics, and such artists as know nothing about it. Where mention of it cannot be quite suppressed, the next best thing is to pretend that it is of no importance. That transfers can have merit no one doubts, but they necessarily lack the larger set of merits which is only possible to crayonstone. Hence, when Mr. Pennell writes in International Studio, Vol. 7 (1899), p. 43, col. 2, par. 2, that “you can do anything on paper that you can do on stone,” he writes mistakenly.

      II. THE STONE

      . . . .

      AS ALREADY stated, the principle of printing by the repulsion of oil and water, which was Senefelder’s invention and which has been called “lithography,” has been found applicable to so many other substances than stone—zinc, aluminum, glass, rubber, iron, etc.—that a wider name is needed for the work done by this method. “Planography,” of which lithography is one division, has been introduced. Planography prints neither from a raised surface nor from an incised surface, but from a flat surface whose diversities are purely chemical. A part of this surface, by being treated in a certain way, is made to accept water and refuse grease; the remaining part, treated in a different way, reverses this action, refusing water while accepting grease. These chemical preparations enable the printer, after wetting his surface, to make the ink stick to certain parts without sticking to other parts. This done, a print is got by pressing paper against it. This was Senefelder’s invention.

      Among all the substances available in planographic printing, stone has from the beginning always held the chief place. It holds it still wherever the first question is the quality of the work. Zinc is sometimes substituted as more convenient; but the work on it is not so good as that on stone, and Mr. Thomas R. Way correctly characterizes it as “lacking the refinement of stone work.”

      THE STONE

      For crayon work the cleanest and most evenly colored stones of extreme hardness are to be selected.

      —SENEFELDER

      Lithographic stone is of a grayish color with a grain like petrified clay. Fossil shells and other organic remains often occur in it. In chemical composition it is about 97 per cent carbonate of lime.

      Various regions of the world yield stones of this character, but as yet it is only from