Etching is a printing technique that produces painstakingly detailed images. To create an etching, an artist covers a metal plate in an acid-resistant substance. Then he or she uses a special needle to carve positive space, removing the acid-resistant coating. The metal is submerged in acid, which burns the incised lines deeper into the ground. The artist inks the work using an intaglio technique, or by adding ink to the negative space. Then he or she presses the metal on a surface to transfer the image.
The contemporary artists whose work is featured on these pages use etching to take genre and their own individual perceptions to new heights.
Etching is a printing technique that allows artists to make very detailed images. To start an etching, an artist covers a metal plate in a substance that acid can’t eat away. He or she uses a special needle to carve an image’s positive space into the metal. The metal is then soaked in acid. This burns the image deeper in the metal. The artist spreads ink into the sunken parts of the metal. Then he or she transfers the image by pressing the metal on another surface.
The contemporary artists whose work is on these pages use etching to explore genre (a category of art).