Graphic art encompasses printmaking techniques such as etching, lithography, woodcut, intaglio and screen printing, alongside digital and illustrative forms. Valued for its democratic access via editions and multiples, graphic art occupies a unique position between craft and fine art. Historically aligned with political messaging, visual culture, and design, it also offers technical precision and aesthetic refinement. Artists engage this medium to explore repetition, variation, and the interplay between surface and image. Graphic art traces its lineage to early woodblock prints in East Asia, notably China's Tang Dynasty (7th–10th centuries), and Europe's Gutenberg printing press in the 15th century. The medium flourished during the German Expressionist movement (early 20th century) and American Pop Art (1960s), with artists like Warhol using silkscreen printing to blur art and mass production. Today, graphic art spans analog and digital domains, maintaining its dual heritage as both fine art and a communicative tool. Metamorphoses in the form have been made possible through experimentation with rapid advances in available technology.