American Monotypes from the Baker/Pisano Collection | Page 10

a similar rediscovery of the process earlier in the nineteenth century. Clearly, the monotype was a process whose time had come. The technique is an offshoot of printing that is rediscovered so regularly that it becomes difficult to count all of its originators. Scholars have considered the possibility that Rembrandt’s (Dutch, 1606–1669) and Giovanni Battista Piranesi’s (Italian, 1720–1778) evocative inkings of their etched plates were a kind of monotype, though the earliest extant pure monotypes are those by Giovanni Benedetto Castiglione (Italian, 1609–1664) from the 1640s, whose monotypes are executed on blank plates, with no linework cut into them. At the end of the 1800s, a time when painters experimented with looser brushwork and when the continuing development of photography helped free artists from being mere copyists of reality, it seems inevitable that monotype would be rediscovered—it lends itself to a kind of Impressionism and rewards the deft execution and craft of the draftsman. Through the nineteenth century there was much ingenuity expended on finding a way for printmakers to create editions that were as painterly as monotype. Generally, inventors came up with a special compound that could be applied to the still-wet artist’s painting executed on a copper plate. When the plate was dried and electroplated, it could then be inked like an etched or engraved plate and printed again and again, providing the spontaneity of the monotype, but with the repeatability of other print 6 INTRODUCTION TO AMERICAN MONOTYPE media. Various inventors came up with similar processes, and by the end of the 1800s three processes were available for those wishing to make a print that had some of the visual qualities of a monotype, but could also be produced in an edition of identical prints: the galvanograph, the electrotint, and the herkomergravure. 5 The example of a herkomergravure—named after its inventor, Hubert Herkomer (English, 1849–1914)—in this exhibition was created by Chase (page 24). Herkomer was a popular painter of portraits and social genre scenes, and an inveterate experimenter in the arts. Chase introduced Herkomer to the monotype process in 1885.6 Herkomer developed his process by 1897, but first wrote about it in 1892.7 It may have been in 1902 that Herkomer returned Chase’s favor by introducing him to the herkomergravure, when Chase next returned to England. The development of the various monotype-like processes parallels the interest in lithography as an artistic medium. Ultimately, processes like the herkomergravure fell into disuse, and one has to suspect that the reason for this is the relative ease by which editions of painterly prints could be made lithographically. Although the lithographic process is complex, it is no more complicated than the herkomergravure, which involves several crucia