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This giclée print offers beautiful color accuracy on a high-quality paper (235 gsm) that is a great option for framing with its smooth, acid free surface. Giclée (French for “to spray”) is a printing process where millions of ink droplets are sprayed onto the paper’s surface creating natural color transitions.
This giclée print offers beautiful color accuracy on a high-quality paper (235 gsm) that is a great option for framing with its smooth, acid free surface. Giclée (French for “to spray”) is a printing process where millions of ink droplets are sprayed onto the paper’s surface creating natural color transitions.
American painter Frederic Edwin Church (1826 – 1900) fluently expressed nature’s grandeur in spectacularly lit, panoramic landscapes. From the Hudson River School, he was the first student of the movement’s famous Thomas Cole. Church approached his art scientifically, using sketches he made outdoors in preparation for the final work. Primarily focusing on North America’s natural scenery, Church also created magnificent images of tropical forests, icebergs and exploding volcanoes from his travels to South America and Europe. His work was distinguished by extraordinary clarity and a crystalline depiction of light called Luminism. His house, Olana, on the Hudson River, is now a museum.
Read MoreThis giclée print offers beautiful color accuracy on a high-quality paper (235 gsm) that is a great option for framing with its smooth, acid free surface. Giclée (French for “to spray”) is a printing process where millions of ink droplets are sprayed onto the paper’s surface creating natural color transitions.
American painter Frederic Edwin Church (1826 – 1900) fluently expressed nature’s grandeur in spectacularly lit, panoramic landscapes. From the Hudson River School, he was the first student of the movement’s famous Thomas Cole. Church approached his art scientifically, using sketches he made outdoors in preparation for the final work. Primarily focusing on North America’s natural scenery, Church also created magnificent images of tropical forests, icebergs and exploding volcanoes from his travels to South America and Europe. His work was distinguished by extraordinary clarity and a crystalline depiction of light called Luminism. His house, Olana, on the Hudson River, is now a museum.
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