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Electrography [electrophotography; xerography].
Term for processes involving the interaction of light and electricity to produce images and for the production of original works of art by these processes. Since these processes are used by nearly all photocopiers, the production of such works has also been referred to as copy art, although this is misleading, since it suggests the mere replication of already existing works. Artistic photocopies were made in California in the late 1950s, but electrography proper as an international art form dates from the early 1960s, when electrographers developed its basic techniques. Bruno Munaris pioneering works, workshops and publications, starting in 1963, foreshadowed the preponderant role played by Europe in the history of electrography, to which important exhibitions at the Musée National dArt Moderne in Paris (1980) and in Valencia (1988) later testified. Electrographs vary widely in size and can be over 1 km in length; materials used include not only paper but also canvas and leather. In the mid-1970s xeroradiography (a xerographic process in which an X-ray gun is used to obtain X-ray pictures) and telecopy respectively gave rise to electroradiographic art and fax art. The advent in the 1980s of the digital copier, with its creative programmes, also created new possibilities, and from 1989 the colour laser copier could be connected to a computer or a video camera, thereby increasing the creative potential of electrography. At the end of the 20th century it was one of the most practised technological art forms, with Pol Bury and David Hockney among its prominent exponents. The Museo Internacional de Electrografía in Cuenca, Spain, is the leading institution devoted to the subject.
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- printing
- Ink, §II, 1(ii): Uses in East Asia: Printing
- Japan, §VI, 5(iv)(a): Modern painting: Yoga in the Meiji period
- Printing
- historical and regional traditions
- Ancient Near East
- Australia
- Buddhism
- Bulgaria
- Central Asia, Eastern
- Central Asia, Western
- China
- Czech Republic
- Egypt
- England
- France
- Germany
- Indian subcontinent
- Ireland
- Islamic
- Italy
- Japan
- Colophon, §2: Japan
- Japan, §VII, 2(i)(a): Calligraphy: Buddhist scriptures, before AD 794
- Japan, §VII, 2(i)(c): Calligraphy: Buddhist scriptures, Kamakura period and after
- Japan, §IX, 3(i)(a): Prints, Edo period and after: Process and tools
- Korea
- Netherlands, the
- Russia
- Scotland
- Tibet
- United States of America
- materials
- cameras (ii) (photography)
- ferric chloride
- gelatin
- glass
- inks
- Ink
- Ink, §I: Types and properties
- Ink, §I, 2: Printing
- Ink, §I, 2(ii): Printing in the Western world
- Ink, §II: Uses
- Ink, §II, 2(ii): Uses in the Western world: Printing
- Photography, §I, 2: Processes and materials: Glossary
- Savage, William
- lasers
- mica
- paper
- plaster
- plastics
- presses
- type-faces
- wood
- processes
- à la poupée
- block see woodblock
- chiaroscuro
- collograph
- collotype
- colour
- Book, §3: Decoration and illustration
- Book illustration, §I, 1: Before the 1490s
- Printing, §2: Origination of the image
- Prints, §III, 6(ii): Colour printing
- China
- England
- France
- Japan
- Japan, §IX, 2(i): Books, Edo period and after: Format and production
- Japan, §IX, 3(iii)(a): Prints, c 1600c 1760
- Japan, §IX, 3(iii)(b): Prints, c 1760c 1780
- Japan, §IX, 3(iii)(b): Prints, c 1760c 1780
- Japan, §IX, 3(iii)(c): Prints, c 1780c 1800
- Japan, §IX, 3(iii)(d): Prints and books: Edo period: prints and after: Historical development: c. 1800c. 1820
- Suzuki Harunobu
- United States of America
- cross-line screen printing
- diazo
- electrography
- flexographic printing
- Goupilgravure
- half-tone block
- heliography
- heliogravure see photogravure; PHOTOGRAPHY -> processes
- Japan
- line block
- lithography see LITHOGRAPHY
- net
- offset
- photogalvanography
- photographic
- photogravure
- photolithography see PHOTOLITHOGRAPHY
- photomechanical
- photomezzotint see Goupilgravure
- phototype
- planographic
- process reproduction
- registration
- transfer
- woodblock
- Woodburytype
- xerography see electrography
- states see under PRINTS
- uses
- art (reproduction of works of)
- banknotes
- Bibles
- books
- carpets
- catalogues
- ceramics
- cotton
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