Examples of silk-screen printing in the following topics:
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- Robert Rauschenberg also was considered a Neo-Dadaist, and his "Combines" incorporated found objects, printed materials, and urban debris with traditional fine art materials.
- Warhol's artwork ranges in many forms of media including hand drawing, painting, printmaking, photography, silk screening, sculpture, film, and music.
- Eventually, he moved from hand painting to silk-screen printing, removing the handmade element altogether.
- The element of detachment reached such an extent at the height of Warhol's fame that he had several assistants producing his silk-screen multiples.
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- In screen printing, each color must be printed separately and needs a separate stencil and/or screen.
- Traditionally the process was called screen printing or silkscreen printing because silk was used in the process prior to the invention of polyester mesh.
- Currently, synthetic threads are commonly used in the screen printing process.
- Screen printing is an efficient and popular way to print a wide array of materials.
- As a result, screen printing is used in many different industries.
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- The earliest surviving woodblock prints are fragments of printed silk, dating back to China's Han Dynasty (before AD 220).
- Woodblock prints also vary in their uses of color.
- In both Japanese and European woodcuts, black ink prints were generally used for book illustrations, while color was reserved for single-leaf prints.
- Another method is called 'reduction printing' and employs the use of one block to print several layers of color.
- While prints were generally made in one color (monochrome) or two, they could also be painted by hand after printing.
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- Traditional painting involves essentially the same techniques as calligraphy; it is done with a brush dipped in black or colored ink and painted on paper or silk.
- The finished work can be mounted on hanging scrolls or handscrolls; traditional painting can also be done on album sheets, walls, lacquerware, folding screens, and other media.
- Much of what is known of early Chinese figure painting comes from burial sites, where paintings were preserved on silk banners, lacquered objects, and tomb walls.
- Native Chinese religions do not typically use cult images of deities, and large religious sculptures are nearly all Buddhist, dating mostly from the 4th to the 14th century CE and arriving via the Silk Road.
- Bronze, gold, silver, rhinoceros horn, Chinese silk, ivory, lacquer, cloisonne enamel, and many other materials had specialist artists working in them.
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- Rinpa artists worked in various formats, notably screens, fans, hanging scrolls, woodblock printed books, lacquerware, ceramics, and kimono textiles.
- Kōetsu's collaborator, Tawaraya Sōtatsu, maintained an atelier in Kyoto and produced commercial paintings such as decorative fans and folding screens.
- Two of his most famous works include the folding screens Wind and Thunder Gods (風 Fūjin Raijin-zu), located in Kennin-ji temple in Kyoto, and Matsushima (松) at the Freer Gallery in Washington, DC.
- Sakai published a series of 100 woodcut prints based on paintings by Kōrin, and his painting Summer and Autumn Grasses (夏 Natsu akikusa-zu) is painted on the back of Kōrin's Wind and Thunder Gods screen and is now at the Tokyo National Museum.
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- As with calligraphy, the most popular materials for paintings are paper and silk.
- Traditional painting can also be done on album sheets, walls, lacquerware, folding screens, and other media.
- Ink and color on silk, 226.6x110.3 cm.
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- Traditionally, fiber is taken from plants or animals (for example, cotton comes from cotton seed pods, linen from flax stems, wool from sheep hair, and silk from the spun cocoons of silkworms).
- There are various ways to embellish these textiles, for instance by dyeing and printing to add color and pattern; through embroidery and other types of needlework; through tablet weaving; and through lace-making .
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- These items could be found in the homes of the wealthy alongside embroidered silks and wares of jade, ivory, and cloisonné.
- However, there were guides to help the wary new connoisseur; in Liu Tong's book printed in 1635, he told his readers various ways to differentiate between fake and authentic pieces of art.
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- Korean paper art includes all manner of handmade paper (hanji), which is used for architectural purposes (such as window screens and floor covering), printing, artwork, the Korean folded arts (such as paper fans and figures), and Korean paper clothing.
- Manhwa is the general Korean term for comics and print cartoons.
- The first woodcut manhwa by an unidentified painter, printed in Gamgak Nodong Yahak Dokbon in 1908
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- Television screens, for example, use additive color since they are made up of the primary colors of red, blue and green.
- Common applications of subtractive theory include printing and photography.