Here's an excellent article from Minnesota Public Radio extolling/explaining the virtues of all:
While the market for buying and selling art tends to be the domain of the cultural elite, many of us have picked up a favorite wall-hanging at a local gallery or art fair. For those of us on a budget, it's just as important to know the value of what we're getting, and that can vary drastically depending on whether we're buying an "original," a "limited-edition print" or a "giclée." To better understand the differences myself, I consulted some experts around town. Arts 101: What's in a Name?
What's your input?
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Larry Berman
Digital Jury Services
http://BermanGraphics.com
412-401-8100
Larry Berman
Digital Jury Services
http://BermanGraphics.com
412-401-8100
The only way a photograph or a work of digital art can manifest itself at an art show is as a print, a copy of the image taken by the camera or created on a computer. The issue isn't that they are copies, the issue is people keep trying to label one thing as another thing when it definitely is not so.
Let's all just stand in front of a zebra and keep calling it a koala until it becomes one or at least until we all believe it's a koala, shall we ?!
http://www.naia-artists.org/work/2dmethods.htm