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Giclée Artist

Atelier AskArt's Alexander S. Kabbaz took a unique path

Giclée printing - for artists - by artists. Quite rare is the combination of a reverence for art and respect for artists with the knowledge and skill of an experienced printer and computer pro that results in the true giclée printing artist. Alexander S. Kabbaz - as he would say, "more by coincidence than by design", epitomizes that rare talent.
The vast majority of today's giclée printing operators stumbled sideways into the profession from the fields of photography or lithography. Neither photography, a chemistry-based reproduction, nor lithography, a formula-based machine process, are ideal training grounds to marry the elements necessary for fine art giclée printing.


One of Kabbaz's recent giclées, 9/11/01

A Unique Multi-discipline Process
Giclée is a unique process, thoroughly computer software dependent. It requires a wealth of knowledge about the use of a myriad of different, often conflicting computer programs. Giclée is a unique process, thoroughly printer dependent. It requires experience with pigmented color inks, fine printing papers, and the mechanics of complex printing equipment. Giclée is a unique process, thoroughly computer hardware dependant. It requires in-depth familiarity with monitor, processor, and network interaction and operational parameters. Alexander S. Kabbaz uniquely brings thirty years of that wide ranging experience and knowledge to the field.


Lucia circa 1930

Kabbaz's grandmother, the well-known surrealist Lucia, is widely credited with being the driving force behind the establishment of the modern Hamptons' artists' colony. Funded in part by Peggy Guggenheim, Lucia was encouraged in 1938 by sponsors Sara and Gerald Murphy to embark on an important project. As a long-time member of the Paris art colony, Lucia was to convince her European artist peers that coming to East Hampton would save them from Hitler's campaign against 'degenerate artists'. 
Implore she did. The first among a score of artists to arrive were Ferdnand Léger, Raoul Dufy, Piet Mondrian and Marc Chagall. And so began the now world famous artists colony. Thusly immortalized, the Hamptons became the avant garde place for the likes of Pollock, the Ernsts, Krasner, DeKooning and the rest who arrived right at the end of the War. The Hamptons became their home . . . Lucia's Artists' Woods their central gathering place and hangout.
A Lifelong Love for Fine Art
It was in this unqiue art-driven environment that Alexander spent his formative years. "My entire life has revolved around various manifestations of art. From the time I was five years old, my grandmother Lucia began to instill in me an interest in design and sculpture. Occasionally, she would hand me her brush and say, 'Alex, make a convex curving stroke to the left here on my canvas. But don't tell anyone!' I remember back when I was four, she had Carlos Montoya sit me on his knee and play a flamenco version of Happy Birthday. 


Alexander S. Kabbaz

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There was this whole gaggle of adults in the room, none to my great pleasure. Esteban Vicente was there for the party, as were Zogbaum, Krasner, DeKooning, Pollock, Keisler, and a few others if Roger's diary is correct. What did I know? To me, it was just a bunch of grown-ups talking about paintings and taking Lucia's attention away from me! To them I was nought but a little twit . . . but at least I was an excuse for Lucia to cook one of her famous Lebanese gourmet feasts.”

A Giclée Education Begins
By the age of 23, Kabbaz had gone out on his own and, in 1973, founded The Graphics Store, a Broadway based graphic arts and printing company. Within a few years, the Graphics Store had some 22 printing presses, cameras and platemakers in operation between its two Upper East and Upper West Side locations. 
Having dual careers as both graphic artist/printer & artiste/designer/maker of very upscale custom clothing, Kabbaz gradually decided to concentrate on one of them and reduced the graphic arts business until it became strictly an in-house operation providing unique, high quality output and design for his business and those of a few close friends. That is, until the mid-1980's and the advent of the 'personal' computer.


Left: The "CompuGraphic", one of the first computers in the printing field. 
In the beginning of time, your art would have been shot by a copy camera, separated into the 
four printing colors, and "stripped" into place for platemaking as Kabbaz is doing above.

Computers and Printing Get Married
By 1986, Alexander was visualizing the upcoming revolution which would be the eventual outgrowth of the marriage of the computer with fine art. And what a marriage it has become! "I remember our first computer-driven color printer", he mused. “It was a huge machine which produced 180 d.p.i. tabloid prints at the rate - on a good day - of one or two an hour. By today's 1440 d.p.i. npq standards, the old Hewlett-Packard machine was a virtual Model-T Ford".

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The learning of inks, dyes, & pigments was one of Kabbaz's earlier pursuits, shown here in the hand-dipped candles for which he became known while finishing his studies.


Your work would have been proofed on a small proof press (right) and finally, after many 
generations of proof, re-shoot, re-strip, new plates, new proofs, etc., etc., would finally
 have been output on a full size Harris Press (left) such as this one.

By 1994, the entire studio had been computerized. "Purchasing the first Epson 3000 shipped to the East Coast was one of our most important achievements", recalled the enthusiastic entrepreneur. "It gave us a few years edge on the 1440 d.p.i. learning curve.” Experimentation with paper stocks, ink formulas, and color profiles are essential elements in the education of a fine giclée printer. Knowledge of the color gamuts of your machines . . . and how to work around those limitations to produce the best possible reproduction of an art original . . . is a skill which does not develop overnight.
Before there was giclée, there was the digital ink jet from which it grew. As time went by, this process grew more and more sophisticated. Quality has grown by magnitudes unimaginable even a few years ago. Why, even the world’s finest printing presses are capable only of printing 300 dots per inch. At the 1440/2880 dot resolution of giclée, we are currently five times better than that.

And who knows what tomorrow will bring!


One of AskArt's earlier digital prints
 flies over New York City's 
Madison Avenue during the mid-1990's.

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