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<p>[QUOTE="Figtree3, post: 1492669, member: 33"]There is a definition of Presentation Proofs on this page from the Institute for Research in Art at the University of South Florida: <a href="http://graphicstudio.usf.edu/gs/education/printmaking.html" target="_blank" class="externalLink ProxyLink" data-proxy-href="http://graphicstudio.usf.edu/gs/education/printmaking.html" rel="nofollow">http://graphicstudio.usf.edu/gs/education/printmaking.html</a></p><p>"<b>Presentation Proofs</b><i>. </i>Signed impressions equal in quality to the numbered edition, which are inscribed and presented by the artist to special collaborators, involved in the project whose contributions the artist wishes to recognize. The Presentation Proof is a long-standing tradition in the printmaking profession, and provides special collaborators with important samples of their work for their portfolio."</p><p><br /></p><p>- Now, I'm not sure that Elizabeth Taylor and Larry Fortensky actually collaborated, or how they were involved in the project. But this is one definition. I'm seeing similar definitions on other sites also.[/QUOTE]</p><p><br /></p>
[QUOTE="Figtree3, post: 1492669, member: 33"]There is a definition of Presentation Proofs on this page from the Institute for Research in Art at the University of South Florida: [URL]http://graphicstudio.usf.edu/gs/education/printmaking.html[/URL] "[B]Presentation Proofs[/B][I]. [/I]Signed impressions equal in quality to the numbered edition, which are inscribed and presented by the artist to special collaborators, involved in the project whose contributions the artist wishes to recognize. The Presentation Proof is a long-standing tradition in the printmaking profession, and provides special collaborators with important samples of their work for their portfolio." - Now, I'm not sure that Elizabeth Taylor and Larry Fortensky actually collaborated, or how they were involved in the project. But this is one definition. I'm seeing similar definitions on other sites also.[/QUOTE]
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