About Giclee Prints
'The
Definition:
Giclee (zhee-klay) - The French word "giclée" is a feminine
noun that means a spray or a spurt of liquid. The word may have been derived
from the French verb "gicler" meaning "to squirt".
The Term: The term "giclee print" connotes an elevation in printmaking
technology. Images are generated from high resolution digital scans and printed
with archival quality inks onto various substrates including canvas, fine
art, and photo-base paper. The giclee printing process provides better colour
accuracy than other means of reproduction.
The Process: Giclee prints are created typically using professional
8-Color to 12-Color ink-jet printers. Among the manufacturers of these printers
are vanguards such as Epson, MacDermid Colorspan, & Hewlett-Packard. These
modern technology printers are capable of producing incredibly detailed prints
for both the fine art and photographic markets. Giclee prints are sometimes
mistakenly referred to as Iris prints, which are 4-Color ink-jet prints from
a printer pioneered in the late 1970s by Iris Graphics.
The Advantages: Giclee prints are advantageous to artists who do not
find it feasible to mass produce their work, but want to reproduce their art
as needed, or on-demand. The prohibitive up-front cost of mass production
for an edition is eliminated. Archived files will not deteriorate in quality
as negatives and film inherently do. Another tremendous advantage of giclee
printing is that digital images can be reproduced to almost any size and onto
various media, giving the artist the ability to customise prints for a specific
client.
The Quality: The quality of the giclee print rivals traditional silver-halide
and gelatin printing processes and is commonly found in museums, art galleries,
and photographic galleries.
The Market: Numerous examples of giclee prints can be found in New
York City at the Metropolitan Museum, the Museum of Modern Art, and the Chelsea
Galleries. Recent auctions of giclee prints have fetched $10,800 for Annie
Leibovitz, $9,600 for Chuck Close, and $22,800 for Wolfgang Tillmans (April
23/24 2004, Photographs, New York, Phillips de Pury & Company.)'
The text above is from the website www.gicleeprint.net