Sunday, November 24, 2019
Cheret lithographic posters and Art Nouveau essays
Cheret lithographic posters and Art Nouveau essays    Although lithography was invented in 1798, it was at  first too slow and expensive for     poster production. Most posters were woodblocks or metal engravings with little color or     design. This all changed with Cherets "three stone lithographic process," a  breakthrough     which allowed artists to achieve every color in the spectrum with as little as three stones -     red, yellow and blue - printed in careful registration.      	Although the process was difficult, the result was a remarkable  intensity of color     and texture, with sublime transparencies and nuances impossible in other media (even to     this day). This ability to combine word and image in such an attractive and economical     format finally made the lithographic poster a powerful innovation. Starting in the 1870s     in Paris, it became the dominant means of mass communication in the rapidly growing     	In France especially, as the industrial age grew, the average person had more time     for themselves. They became better educated. They were becoming readers, theater goers,     music and art lovers. It seems as though the French developed a keener sense of art and     style, ahead of everyone else. Paris became the center for culture and artistic excellence,     	These were changing times. The middle class started to have access to consumer     goods. This new consumer-oriented economy created a need for a medium to reach the     masses of people with product information. The poster filled this need. To reach the     people they had to be loud, colorful, easy to read and easy to understand. More     importantly they had to be inexpensive as they only lasted for such a short period of time.     	Jules Cheret pioneered color lithography as an economical means of advertising.     His innovations with color and shading produced images that convey their message in a     matter of seconds while still proving interesting more than one hundred years later with    ...     
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