The term "graphic arts" usually refers to drawing and printmaking. It comes from the Greek graphikos, which means "able to draw or paint." The graphic arts include the techniques used to make prints. An artist makes prints when he wants several copies of a single drawing. He carves his drawing into a slab of metal or wood. He can also burn it into metal or stone with acid. He then inks the slab and prints it onto paper with a press. Many copies can be made, and each is an original work of art.
Pictures that we see in books or buy in printshops are not original works of art; they are reproductions. The original painting or drawing has been photographed and reproduced by mechanical methods. An artist's print, however, is original art because it has been made directly from the woodblock, plate, or stone that the artist himself prepared.