Salvador Dali

Divine Comedy – Paradise 18 – The Splendor of Beatrice

$10.500

9 5/8 x 7 1/4

Wood engraving in color on rives paper after a watercolor

Registration 831685.0002

“That blessed mirror now enjoyed alone.  His word within himself, and I too fed, tempering the sweet with bitter, on my own.”

Hand signed in pencil lower, right by the artist, and also signed in the block.

Blind stamp of the editor J. Estrade, lower left.

Signed in pencil on the verso by Daniel David, the former director of Les Heures Claires, Eduard Fornes, the former director of the publishing company L’Editorial Mediteranea, and Jean Estrade, former artistic director of Les Heures Claires, Published by Les Editions d’Arte Les Heures Claires, Paris.

The 100  wood engravings for the “Divine Comedy” were executed over a 1 year period from 1951 to 1964.  From 1951 to 1960, Dali painted the 100 watercolors whih were used as studies for the wood engravings.  From 1960 to 1964, Raymond Jacquet created the more than 3,000 wood blocks which were necessary for the complete “Divine Comedy” with the participation and final approval of Salvador Dali for each of the 100 ngravings.

 

This appraisal is subject ot the terms and conditions set forth on the reverse side hereof.

 

What is a Giclée

Giclée is a newly coined word created in 1991 by printmaker Jack Duganne for fine art digital prints made on inkjet printers.  The name originally applied to fine art prints created on Iris printers in a process invented in the late 1980s but has since come to mean any high quality inkjet print. It is often used by artists, galleries, and print shops to suggest high quality printing but since it is an unregulated word it has no associated warranty of quality.

Duganne, a printmaker working at Nash Editions, wanted a name for the new type of prints they were producing on the Iris printer, a large-format, high-resolution industrial prepress proofing inkjet printer they had adapted for fine-art printing. He was specifically looking for a word that would not have the negative connotations of “inkjet” or “computer generated”. It is based on the French word gicleur, the French technical term for an inkjet nozzle. The French verb form gicler meant to spray, spout, or squirt. Duganne settled on the noun giclée, meaning “the thing that got sprayed” and also, in French slang, ejaculation (a connotation Duganne did not know until later).

Besides its original association with Iris prints, the word giclée has come to be associated with other types of inkjet printing including processes that use fade-resistant, archival inks (pigment-based), and archival substrates primarily produced on Canon, Epson, HP and other large-format printers.  These printers use the CMYK color process but may have multiple cartridges for variations of each color based on the CcMmYK color model (such as light magenta and light cyan inks in addition to regular magenta and cyan); this increases the apparent resolution and color gamut and allows smoother gradient transitions.  A wide variety of substrates are available, including various textures and finishes such as matte photo paper, watercolor paper, cotton canvas, or artist textured vinyl.

Artists generally use inkjet printing to make reproductions of their original two-dimensional artwork, photographs, or computer-generated art. Professionally produced inkjet prints are much more expensive on a per-print basis than the four-color offset lithography process traditionally used for such reproductions. (A large-format inkjet print can cost more than $50, not including scanning and color correction, compared to $5 for a four-color offset litho print of the same image in a run of 1,000.) Four-color offset lithographic presses have the disadvantage of the full job having to be set up and produced all at once in a mass edition. With inkjet printing the artist does not have to pay for the expensive printing plate setup or the marketing and storage needed for large four-color offset print runs. This allows the artist to follow a just-in-time business model in which inkjet printing can be an economical option, since art can be printed and sold individually in accordance with demand. Inkjet printing has the added advantage of allowing artists to take total control of the production of their images, including the final color correction and the substrates being used, and it is even feasible for individual artists to own and operate their own printers.

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