Prints on Metal
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Metal prints are silkscreened images on aluminum.  They are usually released for gallery shows and are a series of 2 or 3.  Each image printed on metal has a 1/2, 2/2, and an AP version.  A large collection of screenprints on metal were released at Ducky Waddle's "[[Hard_Copy|Hard Copy]]" show in 2006.  The average price of a print on aluminum runs between $500-600 retail.   
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Metal prints are silkscreened images on aluminum.  They are typically released at gallery shows and are a series of 2 or 3.  Each image printed on metal has a 1/2, 2/2, and an AP version.  The AP version only exists if all three prints were successful, so if there is a problem with one of the prints there will be no AP and only 2 will be sold.  There's no public record of which prints are actually editions of 3 vs. editions of only 2.  A large collection of screenprints on metal were released at Ducky Waddle's "[[Hard_Copy|Hard Copy]]" show in 2006.  The current gallery price of a print on aluminum is $600 in the United States (more overseas)Last year they were $500. 
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Shepard started creating prints on metal in 2002 and is still creating them for new prints, though it's unknown if every print is screened on metal.  The actual pieces of metal used changed at some point, as an example of Comandante from 2002 is significantly heavier than an example of This Is Your God Dollar from 2003.  The pieces of aluminum have a brushed finish before the image is screenprinted, and the ink does not seem to adhere as well to the aluminum as it does paper and thus it is very easily scratched.  Virtually all of the prints on metal have small scratches, and in some cases the "scratches" may simply be areas where the ink never adhered to the surface to begin with.  Due to oxidation, contact with moisture, or contact with other materials (such as oils from your hands when handling them) the metal pieces will develop a patina over time, which is natural.
 
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| [[image:Guns and roses.jpg|thumb|175px]] || [[image: Nixon money metal.jpg|thumb|185px]] || [[image:Bush hell metal.jpg|thumb|175px]]
 
| [[image:Guns and roses.jpg|thumb|175px]] || [[image: Nixon money metal.jpg|thumb|185px]] || [[image:Bush hell metal.jpg|thumb|175px]]

Revision as of 18:18, 24 January 2007

3 metal.jpg

Metal prints are silkscreened images on aluminum. They are typically released at gallery shows and are a series of 2 or 3. Each image printed on metal has a 1/2, 2/2, and an AP version. The AP version only exists if all three prints were successful, so if there is a problem with one of the prints there will be no AP and only 2 will be sold. There's no public record of which prints are actually editions of 3 vs. editions of only 2. A large collection of screenprints on metal were released at Ducky Waddle's "Hard Copy" show in 2006. The current gallery price of a print on aluminum is $600 in the United States (more overseas). Last year they were $500.

Shepard started creating prints on metal in 2002 and is still creating them for new prints, though it's unknown if every print is screened on metal. The actual pieces of metal used changed at some point, as an example of Comandante from 2002 is significantly heavier than an example of This Is Your God Dollar from 2003. The pieces of aluminum have a brushed finish before the image is screenprinted, and the ink does not seem to adhere as well to the aluminum as it does paper and thus it is very easily scratched. Virtually all of the prints on metal have small scratches, and in some cases the "scratches" may simply be areas where the ink never adhered to the surface to begin with. Due to oxidation, contact with moisture, or contact with other materials (such as oils from your hands when handling them) the metal pieces will develop a patina over time, which is natural.

Guns and roses.jpg
Nixon money metal.jpg
Bush hell metal.jpg
Comandante metal.jpg
Dollar metal.jpg
Strummer metal.jpg
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