Printmaking
The Printmaking program at UC Berkeley has an illustrious history. Originally designed by Karl Kasten, the studios have developed over the years from the remarkable teachings of George Miyasaki, Shane Weare, Sylvia Lark, Don Farnsworth, Barbara Foster and Randy Hussong.
Located on the second floor of the Anthropology & Art Practice Building, the two Printmaking Studios include equipment for stone and plate lithography, intaglio, screen printing, relief, monotype, and digital and photo processes.
The lithography studio has three presses, a large graining sink, and a wide variety of lithographic stones. The intaglio studio is equipped with three etching presses including a large American-French press , two hot plates, an aquatint box, a ventilated cleaning hood, and a separate acid room equipped to etch large plates. Three screen printing stations are available for water-based printing, along with a spray booth and a separate area for coating and storing light-sensitive screens. The printmaking program has its own digital facilities and a large NUARC flip-top exposure unit for photographic lithography, intaglio, and screen printing processes.
Students explore both traditional and experimental printmaking techniques, with an emphasis on the development of ideas and concepts. The Printmaking Studios provide a working environment for students to learn collaboratively, develop their creative process through direct assistance and engage in critical discussion.
Two studio classes are taught in Printmaking each semester, and are assisted by a full-time staff Mechanician. Courses rotate between these selections:
ART 16: Printmaking (Relief & Intaglio): Foundations
ART 17: Printmaking (Lithography & Screenprinting): Foundations
ART 120: Advanced Printmaking: Intaglio
ART 122: Advanced Printmaking: Lithography
ART 123: Advanced Printmaking: Screen Print
ART 124: Advanced Projects in Printmaking
ART 160: Special Topics in Visual Studies
The Printmaking area is also affiliated with the Graphic Arts Loan Collection (GALC) on campus, which is a collection of framed, original lithographs, etchings, and woodblock prints. These prints are available for loan to students, faculty, and staff of the UC Berkeley campus. These patrons may check out up to two prints each academic year beginning with the fall semester.
In 2022, Senior Lecturer Randy Hussong curated “Proof: 28 years of printmaking at UC Berkeley” at the Worth Ryder Art Gallery, which featured more than 1400 prints from 1135 students who have taken printmaking classes. Hussong maintained an archive of student prints from every class since 1994 and was an extraordinary opportunity to view nearly three decades of etchings, lithographs, relief and screen prints.
Studios location: 2nd Floor, Anthropology + Art Practice Building
Lab use: Access to these spaces is reserved for students enrolled in Printmaking classes and to graduate students in Art Practice.
Facilities/Materials fee: varies per class
For more information, contact:
Tamar Beja, Printmaking Studio Mechanician
Email: tamar@berkeley.edu
Office: 310 Anthropology + Art Practice Building
Media highlights
Art for the Asking: The Graphic Arts Loan Collection at the Morrison Library, Worth Ryder Art Gallery, Fall 2022
Berkeley Library: 2021/22 Art Practice & University Library Printmaking Award Winner: Vera McBride
UC Berkeley News on Karl Kasten and Willem de Kooning, Oct. 1, 2008