The Robinson Library

Lithography.--History.
Aloys SenefelderAloys Senefelder

was born in Prague, Bohemia (now in the Czech Republic), on November 6, 1771, the son of an actor. He studied at Munich, where his diligence earned him a scholarship to study law at Ingolstadt. The death of his father in 1791 forced him to leave school in order to help support his mother and seven siblings. He took up the writing of plays but was unable to have them published because he did not have enough money to pay for their engraving. He decided, therefore, to do the engraving himself, and bought the copper plates on which to do so. The results were not encouraging, but Senefelder refused to give up. One day in 1796, Senefelder happened to use a grease pencil to note down a laundry list on a slab of limestone. At first he thought that if he etched away the surface of the surrounding stone the markings would stand out in relief. This idea eventually resulted in his inventing the technique of lithography.

Senefelder spent two years testing out his idea, using metal surfaces as well as various types of stone. the principle of lithographic printingHe eventually came up with a flat surface method of printing -- what we now know as lithography. The method is based on the principle that grease and water are mutually repellent. The design to be reproduced was drawn directly on the stone with a greasy ink or a grease crayon. The stone was then wetted. When oil printing ink was applied, it left the wet surfaces of the stone clean but adhered to the grease in the design drawing. The lithograph could now be made by a direct impression on a sheet of paper pressed on top of the stone. Senefelder called this process "chemical printing."

lithographic machineThe number of impressions that could be made from one plate was virtually unlimited, and each impression was remarkably sensitive in reproducing the original in all its details. Whats more, a design transferred from the stone to the paper could then be transferred in turn on to a clean stone, and the same thing done as many times as the designer liked. In this way, several copies of a design could be printed off simultaneously on one large sheet of paper.

frontispiece of 'A Complete Course of Lithography'Senefelder explained the lithographic process in A Complete Course of Lithography, published in 1818.

The French painters Théodore Géricault and Eugène Delacroix first saw the advantages of lithography to convey their artistic intentions in the 1820's. Goya, in his old age, took up lithography and produced a well-known series of bull-fighting subjects. The printmaker, caricaturist, and painter Honoré Daumier did much of his most important work in the form of lithographs, using an adaptation of the method in which the picture was drawn in greasy ink on paper before being transferred to the stone -- a method that greatly increased subtleties of textures. poster by Toulousse-LautrecColor lithography was developed in the middle of the 19th century, using a whole series of stones because one stone had to be used for each individual color. The most successful and best-known results of the technique were the posters of Henri de Toulouse-Lautrec.

Lithography remains an important medium for artistic impression. Among the modern artists who have used it are Picasso and Henry Moore.

Senefelder was awarded a gold medal by the Society of Encouragement of England, the highest medal of the Polytechnische Verein fur Baiern, the gold honorary medal of the Order for Civilverdienst of the Bavarian Crown, and various other prizes for his development of lithography.

Senefelder died in Munich on February 26, 1834

Questions or comments about this page?


Anthony Feldman and Peter Ford. Scientists and Inventors, The People Who Made Technology from Earliest Times to Present Day. New York:Facts on File, 1979. (pp 102-104)


The Catholic Encyclopedia. www.newadvent.org/cathen/13714b.htm

other sources and links

Lithography.--History.

07/15/2007