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The Multi-Layered Print, Past, Present and Future (AG-Spring 2011)
My interest in multi-layer photographic printing techniques was sparked 2 years ago when I viewed a number of Irving Penn’s platinum prints at the V&A print room in London. At that time I had been printing in platinum for a number of years and was surprised at the density of blacks Penn was achieving, not only this but his prints had an almost three dimension quality to them. I was intrigued and wanted to learn more about him and his printing technique, little did I know it would take me on a journey of discovery into other fascinating multi-layer printing techniques.
Irving Penn was one of the finest platinum printers of recent times and created some of the most exquisite, complex, valuable and sort after platinum prints. He was well respected within photographic community and world at large first and foremost for being a great photographer, however he is also championed as leading the revival of the platinum printing process in the late 1960’s/70’s since becoming dormant for over 50 years.
The book entitled ‘Platinum Prints’ by Sarah Greenough, gives a comprehensive account of his life as a platinum printer. In her essay on Penn she describes how in the early 1960’s he was obsessed with this alternative printing process and devoted many years of his life to mastering the technique. His initial results using a single layered approach to platinum printing were in his own words as being ‘less than satisfactory’. Through extensive research and testing he was able ‘to replicate the process, but not in spirit.’ However in an interview for between Greenough and Penn in 2003 he told her of the moment he had an epiphany, she states;
‘Persistent, meticulous, but also intuitive, Penn had a breakthrough while he was working on a television commercial for Nescafe. As he looked at the first platinum print he had ever made he realised “in a flash” that he needed to coat, expose and develop his print multiple times in order to achieve the richness and complexity he desired. Also he immediately understood that in order to coat and develop his print several times, he needed to ensure that the paper did not change size during its repeated submersions in chemicals. To do this, he realized, the paper had to be attached to a stable material, such as aluminium.’
Once Penn had mastered the technique of multi-layering platinum printing he started to revisit the vast archive of photographs/negatives he had taken for publications in the past for such magazines as Vogue and transform them from being a ‘thing suitable for reproduction….into something beautiful in and of itself’
I was inspired by these words and set about trying to replicate his technique. As I soon found out printing in layers requires a very different approach to single layered platinum printing and a long period of testing ensued, however I soon started to get achieve some positive results.
Figure one illustrates the density gains in layering platinum/palladium over a period of three days and three separate exposure cycles on Arches Platine paper bonded to aluminium.
This test strip was then placed side by side a multi-layered platinum print created by Penn entitled ‘Harlequin’ owned by the V&A museum, as is shown in figure 2. This particular Penn print is a good example to use as it has absolute black values to compare against. Unfortunately I was not able to take density readings from the actual print, not surprising really as a similar example sold recently for over $300,000, however with the help of the assistant curator of photography at the V&A, Rachel Francis, we both concluded that the density of the Penn print was comparable to the third layer of the test strip.
Once this testing was complete I started to re-print a selection of my single layered images with a multi-layered approach to platinum printing. Overall the multi-layered prints have a greater depth and richness to those that I have previously printed using a single layer and negative, as can be seen in Figure 3.
With the many advances in digital negative creation and platinum and palladium chemistry since Penn’s printing days, I am in no doubt that a single layered approach to platinum printing can yield exquisite results. However I am of the opinion, based on my own on-going research, that a multi-layered approach not only increases the maximum density of the blacks possible, but also gives the platinum printer greater freedom and control over the final print. This is as a result of being able to take advantage of crafting individual negatives for each successive layer, using differing exposure times for each layer, as well as using different contrast mixes of platinum and palladium for each layer, all of which are not possible using a single layered printing approach.
Around the same time as my initial research into Irving Penn’s monochromatic multi-layered platinum prints I went to a retrospective exhibition of the iconic fashion photographer Sarah Moon, held at the Royal College of Art. It featured over 130 silver gelatine prints and 30 colour pigment transfer prints. I had never viewed a colour pigment transfer print before and found them to be exceptionally beautiful, they had a great texture and depth to them unlike other colour printing process I had ever seen. I wanted to take a closer look at the prints so I visited the Michael Hoppen gallery who represent Moon in the U.K.
Being able to look at the prints up close and personal was visual revelation, much like the time when I viewed my first platinum print. Keen to find out more about the prints and how they were created, Michael put me in touch with Adam Lowe.
Speaking to Adam I learnt that in 1995 he founded ‘Permaprint’; a workshop based in London that specialised in the creation of pigment transfer prints. Initially with the help of Gerard Aniere (a dye transfer printer) and soon after Michael Ward (an experienced printer with considerable technical knowledge and editioning skills). They perfected all aspects of the printing and transfer process and worked with many important photographers artists including Eva Arnold, Martin Parr, Sarah Moon, Richard Hamilton to name a few.
By 2001 it became apparent that Adam had reached the limits of what could be achieved with the pigment transfer process and was more interested in the relationship between print and sculpture and ways in which information is mediated. This led to Permaprint morphing into Factum Arte, a workshop based in Madrid which has since grown into a much larger enterprise dedicated to digital mediation and the production of works in two and three dimensions for artists and museums. Adam mentioned that he had developed a unique digital printer that was capable of printing multiple layers in perfect registration, much like a digital equivalent to pigment transfer printing process. I was intrigued and asked whether it would be possible to visit him in Madrid, he agreed and a date was set. In the meantime, he suggested that if I wanted to learn more about the pigment transfer process and the work they did with Sarah Moon I should contact Michael Ward who had worked primarily worked with her.
Michael kindly agreed to meet me at my studio and initially showed me some stunning examples of pigment transfer prints that Adam and he had created over the years. He went onto talk about the history of the process which I learnt was first developed in the 1870’s by Louis Ducos Du Hauron, a French photographer who had adapted the monochrome carbon process by adding red, yellow and blue pigment to the gelatine. Permaprint used a modified version of the process that incorporated the use of cyan, magenta, yellow and black (CMYK) pigmented tissue, marketed by Californian company called Ultrastable that was set up in the late 1980’s by the photographer Charles Berger.
I asked Michael if he could elaborate on the steps involved in making a pigment transfer print:
‘The first step involves the creation of CMYK negative separations from the source material. These were made by the invaluable Adrian Lack of Senecio Press.Each separation is placed in contact with it's appropriate sensitised pigment gelatine tissue and exposed on a vacuum table to Ultraviolet light. The gelatine hardens in relation to the amount of light reaching it through the varied densities of the negative. Harder in the shadow detail, softer in the highlights. Once all four colours are exposed the first is bathed in cold water, pin registered and squeegeed into firm contact with a thin sheet of degreased acetate. These adhered sheets are then bathed in warm water to enable the peeling away of the backing tissue leaving the pigmented gelatine of colour no.1 on the acetate. Delicate rinsing reveals the tones of the image.The squeegeeing, peeling and rinsing process is repeated until the four colours are applied in register to the acetate. The full image is again soaked and laminated to it's final surface. This might be handmade paper, a plastic base, aluminium, glass or wood.’
Clearly a complex printing technique, Michael went on to tell me about the numerous challenges involved in the process;
At each stage there were dangers that a print might be lost. The gelatine, once wet, was extremely delicate and sensitive to touch and movement. Minute pieces of flying dust or grit could land on the surface causing air pockets which might lift whole areas of gelatine when rinsing or bathing. Atmospheric changes in the studio could affect the strength of adhesion of the gelatine to surfaces. The worst worry was that something like that might happen in the final stages - then all would be lost for that particular print. Start again! Very frustrating!
I was interested to know what he considered the qualities of a finely crafted pigment transfer print were.
‘The lushness and density of colour. The union of that colour with it's surface. In other words, materials complimenting each other. The print being an object, not just a record. This process allows for artistic sensitivity in that application. A good pigment transfer print can be appreciated as much for it's material presence as for it's image. I think it has a more physically tangible quality than the results of some other photographic processes.’
I went onto ask what is was like to work with Sarah Moon and whether he still created prints for her.
‘Sarah was a joy to work with. She wanted the process to give her something and was not involved purely for the archival reliability - she recognised how that deep, dense, rich colour worked with her imagery. Sarah also enjoyed the inherent serendipity and the accident element and what could be gleaned from those uncertainties. There are both painterly and filmic qualities to Sarah's work and her images, in a way, loom. In some cases you are looking at the image and looking for it simultaneously. Her photography does much more than "capture an image", it veils and reveals it. With the pigment transfer process the surface is no distraction from this - one can look deep into the print. Around 2001 my work led me to spend more time concentrating on painting and etching and I was very happy to be able to put Sarah in touch with Tod Gangler of Art and Soul in Seattle who continues to make her pigment transfer prints.’