After Sassoferrato , 1936
8.8 x 7 in (h x w)
Mezzotint on wove paper

Presumably, Hatton created The Virgin in Prayer as a student exercise while studying intaglio printmaking at the Royal College of Art, likely working directly from Sassoferrato’s painting, which is in the collection of The National Gallery of Art in London. Especially popular in eighteenth-century England, mezzotint is the earliest printmaking process to enable the creation of tonal range without the use of a system of line and dot techniques such as
cross-hatching and stippling. Unlike aquatint, which uses the chemical action of acid, mezzotint is entirely mechanical in nature. The surface of the printing plate is uniformly abraded using a metal tool called a rocker. In its prepared state, the plate’s entire surface will hold ink and thus will print as a field of deep black. Working from dark to light, the artist then burnishes down areas of the plate to achieve the desired tone. The more an area is burnished, the less ink it will hold, and the lighter it will print. Areas of the plate that are burnished completely smooth cannot hold any ink and, therefore, will appear as white in the printed image.

Plus de Gregory Allicar Museum of Art

sin titulo , 2013
250 x 500 cm (h x w)
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Compendio de Anatomía , 2019
180 x 120 cm (h x w)
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Plate 9 from the portfolio "Pablo Neruda, Poems from Canto General" , 1968
23.5 x 41 in (h x w)
Lithograph on paper; Gregory Allicar Museum of Art, CSU, museum purchase with funds from the Dale Pruce and Leslie Walker Latin American Art Acquisition fund, 2019.7
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
S , 2020
87 x 57 cm (h x w)
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art
Canoe model (enlarged)
6 x 21 x 21 cm (h x w x d)
Gregory Allicar Museum of Art