Privileges in Printmaking

The Low Countries became a centre of printmaking in the early modern period. Printmaking was a disruptive image-technology because it produced images as multiples on an unprecedented scale. With its success also came problems. One was that copying became a problem as it had not been before in the v...

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Main Author: Marlise Rijks
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: openjournals.nl 2024-12-01
Series:Early Modern Low Countries
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Online Access:https://emlc-journal.org/article/view/20823
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author Marlise Rijks
author_facet Marlise Rijks
author_sort Marlise Rijks
collection DOAJ
description The Low Countries became a centre of printmaking in the early modern period. Printmaking was a disruptive image-technology because it produced images as multiples on an unprecedented scale. With its success also came problems. One was that copying became a problem as it had not been before in the visual arts. This article discusses three approaches used by early modern printmakers to dealing with the problems presented by copying and the fact that prints came in multiples. The first was to acquire privileges as legal protection against copying. Privileges are usually seen as the predecessors of copyright, but here it is argued that this is only part of the story and that they also served as a claim of reliability. A second approach was to take full advantage of the opportunities presented by the fact that prints came in multiples, and to produce images as efficiently as possible, in effect endlessly copying the same images. A third approach was to purposefully ignore the technological possibilities of printmaking and instead produce small print runs or slightly different states of one image. These approaches, it is argued, were related both to technological possibilities and to changing ideas about the (visual) arts, showing how the meanings of concepts such as ‘invention’ and ‘skill’ were shifting at this time.
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spelling doaj-art-9dea8656032f45d6b0fb23cef6f4c7092025-01-09T08:42:44Zengopenjournals.nlEarly Modern Low Countries2543-15872024-12-018210.51750/emlc20823Privileges in PrintmakingMarlise Rijks0Vrije Universiteit Brussel/Universiteit Gent The Low Countries became a centre of printmaking in the early modern period. Printmaking was a disruptive image-technology because it produced images as multiples on an unprecedented scale. With its success also came problems. One was that copying became a problem as it had not been before in the visual arts. This article discusses three approaches used by early modern printmakers to dealing with the problems presented by copying and the fact that prints came in multiples. The first was to acquire privileges as legal protection against copying. Privileges are usually seen as the predecessors of copyright, but here it is argued that this is only part of the story and that they also served as a claim of reliability. A second approach was to take full advantage of the opportunities presented by the fact that prints came in multiples, and to produce images as efficiently as possible, in effect endlessly copying the same images. A third approach was to purposefully ignore the technological possibilities of printmaking and instead produce small print runs or slightly different states of one image. These approaches, it is argued, were related both to technological possibilities and to changing ideas about the (visual) arts, showing how the meanings of concepts such as ‘invention’ and ‘skill’ were shifting at this time. https://emlc-journal.org/article/view/20823printmakingprivilegestechnologyskillinventionliberal arts
spellingShingle Marlise Rijks
Privileges in Printmaking
Early Modern Low Countries
printmaking
privileges
technology
skill
invention
liberal arts
title Privileges in Printmaking
title_full Privileges in Printmaking
title_fullStr Privileges in Printmaking
title_full_unstemmed Privileges in Printmaking
title_short Privileges in Printmaking
title_sort privileges in printmaking
topic printmaking
privileges
technology
skill
invention
liberal arts
url https://emlc-journal.org/article/view/20823
work_keys_str_mv AT marliserijks privilegesinprintmaking