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Giclée Prints

Monna Barrick describes “Giclée” Print Process

manna-barrick

Monna Barrick:

  • noun
  • Gicléezhee-klay )
  • Word Origin: French ‘sprayed ink’
  • a printmaking method using an ink-jet printer for photographic images of paintings to produce high-quality reproductions; also written giclee.

 

Examples:
  • In giclée, the ink is sprayed on to your choice of media in millions of colors utilizing continuous tone technology, retaining all the fine detail of the original.
  • Monna Barrick’s “Pinetop”  Enhanced Giclée Print (of her original oil painting)
  • 24×36 Framed ($550)
31 "Pinetop" Enhanced Giclée Print 24x36 Framed ($550)
31 “Pinetop” Enhanced Giclée Print 24×36 Framed
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Monna Barrick “Life is great”

Monna Barrick says

“Life is great when your job is something you love”

Monna Barrick

 

Monna Barrick is a prolific oil painter and loves to paint all subjects. She works with brush and pallet knife. She loves the desert and has taught herself to do landscapes.

Monna says life is great when your job is something you love. When working on her paintings she says, “I keep in mind that I must do with my subjects, something no photographer could do. I feel if I painted like a photographer, why paint? Why not just take a photograph? A painting has to create the feeling that exists, but cannot be photographed.”