Media Groove Studios News http://mediagroovestudios.com The latest news from Media Groove Studios. en-us Mon, 06 Feb 2012 02:23:08 CST Mon, 06 Feb 2012 02:23:08 CST http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/tech/rss EDITIONS...ORIGINALS...DEFINED <style type="text/css" isprelink="true">@import url(http://www.mediagroovestudios.com/libs/CuteEditor/Style/SyntaxHighlighter.css);</style> <div>When a digital print is combined with non-digital media, we may ask ourselves, &#8220;how do we describe the end result?&#8221;&nbsp;&nbsp;When I go beyond the print by building up layers of paint and resin and assemblage over the original print in order to create a solid structure that bridges printing, painting, collage making and sculpting.&nbsp;&nbsp;The artwork is not a painting or a print; it is not purely digital or traditional.&nbsp;&nbsp;It is an original one-of-a-kind artwork, and yet the source print for the image is reproducible.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div><strong>Multiple Originals</strong></div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>An artwork created with the use of digital media and which has the physical form of being a reproducible digital print, is an example of what can be termed &#8220;multiple original.&#8221; &nbsp;That is, there is no other original artwork other than what is expressed on the digital print. &nbsp;The term multiple original is widely used in galleries and museums when referring to traditional fine art prints such as woodcuts, engravings and etchings, lithographs and screen-prints. &nbsp;In all these cases, there is a matrix or plate of some kind that the print is based on, but that matrix does not constitute the actual artwork. &nbsp;In the case of digital paintings the digital file is equivalent to the matrix or plate. The print is the artwork.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>&nbsp;Multiple prints can be made from the matrix. Each print may vary slightly due to the way ink is applied (or rubbed off) or due to further working of the print surface with other media. &nbsp;Even with these unique aspects to each print, which make them each one-of-a-kind artworks, they are still linked to each other by coming from a common matrix, and are thus multiple originals.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>Creating multiple originals carries the responsibility to track the edition in order to imbue them with value to collectors and clients. &nbsp;An edition may involve some artist proof prints and a limited number of actual artwork prints available for sale. I like to keep the length of editions down to between three and seven in the total number of prints. Many artists choose to have larger editions. &nbsp;For artwork created with digital media choosing an edition length is the same decision that any printmaker faces. &nbsp;With a digital file and high-quality digital printer, an unlimited number of multiple prints can be made that are almost identical; with traditional prints, the matrix or plate eventually degrades, and that sets a natural physical limit to the length of an edition. &nbsp;When hand artwork is applied individually to each print, the artwork takes on a one-of-a-kind stature yet is still related to the other artworks based on the same print.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>No matter how an edition is defined, or how long it is made, an edition represents a symbol of trust between the artist and the art buyer. &nbsp;One way to ensure the integrity of an edition is to provide detailed and specific print documentation with every artwork. &nbsp;At Media Groove Studios &amp; Gallery, the buyer of an artwork has, included on their invoice, a statement of exactly what constitutes the edition, referring to size, substrate, printing method and the number of the print in the edition.</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>Digital printing technology has made enormous progress over the last 15 years in terms of longevity, durability and color fastness. &nbsp;Today&#8217;s generation of pigment inks are far more stable than traditional watercolor paintings. &nbsp;The best is yet to come !</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <style type="text/css" isprelink="true">@import url(http://www.mediagroovestudios.com/libs/CuteEditor/Style/SyntaxHighlighter.css);</style> Wed, 12 Oct 2011 19:53:40 CDT COLORS YOU SEE <style type="text/css" isprelink="true">@import url(http://www.mediagroovestudios.com/libs/CuteEditor/Style/SyntaxHighlighter.css);</style> PLEASE NOTE THAT DUE TO DIFFERENCES IN MONITOR TYPE, &nbsp;QUALITY AND SETTINGS THE IMAGES ON THIS SITE MAY VARY SOMEWHAT IN COLOR &nbsp;FROM WHAT YOU SEE ON YOUR MONITOR. <style type="text/css" isprelink="true">@import url(http://www.mediagroovestudios.com/libs/CuteEditor/Style/SyntaxHighlighter.css);</style> Wed, 12 Oct 2011 19:52:02 CDT COMMISSIONED ARTWORK from Media Groove <style type="text/css" isprelink="true">@import url(http://www.mediagroovestudios.com/libs/CuteEditor/Style/SyntaxHighlighter.css);</style> <div>I am available to do ALL types of commissioned artwork, from animals, people, abstracts, landscapes, corporate artwork and any type of media design. &nbsp;Please call me with any questions you may have on any of these type projects.&nbsp;</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>Keep the Groove,</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>David Rickman</div> <div>david@mediagroovestudios.com&nbsp;</div> <style type="text/css" isprelink="true">@import url(http://www.mediagroovestudios.com/libs/CuteEditor/Style/SyntaxHighlighter.css);</style> Wed, 12 Oct 2011 19:51:04 CDT New Artwork is coming soon! <style type="text/css" isprelink="true">@import url(http://www.mediagroovestudios.com/libs/CuteEditor/Style/SyntaxHighlighter.css);</style> <div>Please be on the lookout for new artwork coming soon to Mediagroove Studios! &nbsp;if you have any questions in the meantime please email me at: &nbsp;david@mediagroovestudios.com</div> <div>&nbsp;</div> <div>Thanks,&nbsp;</div> <style type="text/css" isprelink="true">@import url(http://www.mediagroovestudios.com/libs/CuteEditor/Style/SyntaxHighlighter.css);</style> Wed, 12 Oct 2011 08:30:02 CDT Shades of Color You See <div>The following are just some tid bits I've gathered over the years talking about just what we really see...</div> <div>&#160;<strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">SHADES OF COLOR</span></strong></div> <div>The average human eye can distinguish 7,500,000 shades in nature.</div> <div>&#160;</div> <div>A transparency &#160;can reproduce 750,000 different shades.</div> <div>&#160;</div> <div>A pre-press proof can reproduce 5,500 different shades.</div> <div>&#160;</div> <div>A photographic color print can reproduce 1,500 different shades.</div> <div>&#160;</div> <div>A sheet fed press can reproduce 1,500 different shades.</div> <div>&#160;</div> <div>A web offset press can reproduce 750 different shades.&#160;</div> <div>&#160;</div> <div><strong><span style="text-decoration: underline;">CONTRAST LEVELS</span></strong>&#160;</div> <div>The average human eye can distinguish 1,000 levels in nature.</div> <div>&#160;</div> <div>A transparency can reproduce 400 different levels.</div> <div>&#160;</div> <div>A photographic print can reproduce 80 different levels.</div> <div>&#160;</div> <div>&#160;</div> <div>&#160;</div> Tue, 16 Jun 2009 21:45:00 CDT