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This blog is one of a six-part series highlighting the processes behind printmaking and the art shown in the exhibition that was on view May 26 – July 22, 2017, titled 528.0 See our  for more printmaking videos over the coming weeks.

Monotype is a painterly process that utilizes a printmaking press to create a unique image that can never be reproduced. It is this distinction of not having a reproducible matrix that makes monotype different from the four printmaking processes of relief, intaglio, lithography, and screen printing. º£½ÇÉçÇø BFA Painting graduate Claire Hays will show us their unique approach to monotype using transparent inks and templates.

Five illustrated ice cream cone prints on a gray surface with sketched outlines in the background.

A drawing or painting on a smooth surface like a copper etching plate, zinc, glass, or acrylic glass is pressed and transferred to paper to create a monotype. Ink can also be applied to the plate and removed with brushes, rags, or other found objects in a subtractive technique. Most of the ink is removed during the initial press and reprinting the same matrix can create a ghost print. This unique result which can not be reproduced is why monotype is not considered a true printmaking technique.

A person in a printmaking studio etching onto a surface near a series of ice cream cone prints.

In your opinion is it fair to separate monotype from the other printmaking processes because these images cant be reproduced with a matrix?