Robert Allrich American Indian Print
Similar Sale History
View More Items in Prints & MultiplesRelated Prints & Multiples
More Items in Native American Prints & Multiples
View MoreRecommended Art
View MoreItem Details
Description
"Defiance", American Indian, Cherokee, Navajo, Sioux, Apache, Blackfeet Limited Edition Print, American Indian, Cherokee, Navajo, Sioux, Apache, Blackfeet Limited Edition Print, 1986, Continuous Tone Lithograph from 17 Plates, on fine art paper 25.5" x 32.75", Limited Edition of 500 prints, Hand signed and numbered by the artist in pencil. A vintage Native American Indian print signed by artist Robert Allrich from the 1980's featuring a native American man sitting in front of a mountain, holding a war drum. Printed on high quality art print textured paper.This is a very rare limited edition print that was printed by a special printing process, call Continuous Tone printing, which uses no dots.About the Continuous Tone Printing Process:Screenless lithography, by eliminating the use of halftone screens and halftone dots achieves extraordinary fidelity, fullness of tone, color and detail, impressive color saturation and clear line resolution. Museums, fine artists and publishers with exacting standards use this remarkable process to re-create their finest works of art. Continuous tone lithography (as in a photograph with no dots) evolved from collotype printing. When Black Box Collotype ultimately closed its doors in 2004, it was one of just a few printers left in the world that had mastered the collotype process. While it was a highly desirable reproduction process for the fine art world, it was a laborious, time consuming (read "expensive") process. Since there was no screen involved, a collotype print could be 27 colors without fear of a moiré. But in the old days, on Black Box’s one-unit press, those 27 colors had to be laid down one color at a time. So the most complex jobs could take months to complete.Offset lithography is far faster and less expensive than collotype. Suddenly, four colors and halftone dot patterns were "good enough" because they were so economical. Black Box Collotype was one of the last printing houses in America, if not the world that used the collotype-continuous tone process.
Condition
Excellent Never Circulated Condition
Buyer's Premium
- 25% up to $100,000.00
- 20% above $100,000.00
Robert Allrich American Indian Print
Estimate $300 - $500
1 bidder is watching this item.
Shipping & Pickup Options
Item located in Beverly Hills, CA, usOffers In-House Shipping
Local Pickup Available
Payment
Accepts seamless payments through LiveAuctioneers
TOP