Intaglio
A general term for metal-plate printmaking techniques, including etching, drypoint, engraving, aquatint, and mezzotint. The word comes from the Italian intagliare, meaning “to incise” or “to carve.” In intaglio printing, the lines or areas that hold the ink are incised below the surface of the plate, and printing relies on the pressure of a press to force damp paper into these incised lines or areas, to pick up ink.
Featured Works
9
Shock Troops Advance under Gas (Sturmtruppe geht unter Ga...
Otto Dix
1924
The Train
Romare Bearden
1975
Menacing Head (Drohendes Haupt) from the series Invention...
Paul Klee
1905
The Weeping Woman, I (La Femme qui pleure. I ), state VII
Pablo Picasso
1937
Landscape
Chimei Hamada
1954
Untitled from Algorithms, Apparitions and Translations
Julie Mehretu
2013
Untitled
Robert Gober
2000–01
The Undiscovered Amerindians
Coco Fusco
2012
American Gas Station Project, Ithaca, New York, Perspective
Massimo Scolari
1975