George Bellows, 1913 - Cliff Dwellers - tirage d'art

28,99 €

TTC Expédition calculée à la caisse.

Cliff Dwellers was by George Bellows. The original has the size: 40 3/16 x 42 1/16 in. Oil on canvas was applied by the American painter as the technique for the work of art. The piece of art belongs to the art collection of Los Angeles County Museum of Art. With courtesy of - Musée d'art du comté de Los Angeles (www.lacma.org) (licence: domaine public):. En plus de cela, l'alignement de la reproduction numérique est carré avec un rapport latéral de 1: 1, ce qui signifie que la longueur est égale à la largeur.

Choix de matériaux de produits disponibles

Nous proposons une gamme de différentes tailles et matériaux pour chaque produit. Vous pouvez choisir parmi les options de personnalisation de produit suivantes:

  • L'impression d'affiche (matériau en toile): A poster print is a UV printed sheet of canvas with a slightly roughened finish on the surface, that reminds the actual work of art. A printed poster is ideally qualified for framing your art replica with a custom-made frame. Please bear in mind, that depending on the size of the poster we add a white margin 2-6cm round about the painting, which facilitates the framing with your custom frame.
  • Aluminium dibond (impression métallique): Aluminium Dibond prints are prints on metal with an outstanding depth effect - for a modern look and a non-reflective surface structure. For your Direct Aluminium Dibond option, we print the selected artpiece onto the aluminium white-primed surface. The colors of the print are luminous, details are clear and crisp, and you can literally perceive a matte appearance of the art print surface.
  • Impression sur verre acrylique: The print on acrylic glass, which is sometimes described as a fine art print on plexiglass, will change your favorite original into wonderful décor. Your favorite artwork is made with modern UV printing machines. The special effect of this are sharp and rich colors. With a glossy acrylic glass art print contrasts and also artwork details become visible thanks to the very subtle tonal gradation. Our plexiglass with real glass coating protects your chosen art print against sunlight and heat for up to six decades.
  • Toile: The printed canvas stretched on a wooden frame. The great advantage of canvas prints is that they are relatively low in weight. This means, it is easy to hang your Canvas print without the help of any wall-mounts. Canvas prints are suited for all kinds of walls in your house.

Avertissement: We try everything in order to depict the art products as accurate as we can and to exhibit them visually in our shop. Although, the colors of the printed materials, as well as the printing can differ slightly from the image on the monitor. Depending on the screen settings and the nature of the surface, not all colors are printed 100% realistically. Because the art prints are printed and processed by hand, there may also be minor deviations in the size and exact position of the motif.

Informations structurées sur les produits

Produit d'impression: Reproduction d'art
Méthode de reproduction: reproduction numérique
Méthode de fabrication: Impression directe UV
Fabrication: made in Germany
Type de stock: à la demande
Utilisation du produit: collection d'art (reproductions), galerie d'art
Alignement de l'image: alignement carré
Rapport d'aspect de l'image: 1: 1
Sens: la longueur est égale à la largeur
Matériaux disponibles: impression sur verre acrylique (avec revêtement en verre véritable), impression sur toile, impression sur métal (aluminium dibond), affiche (papier de toile)
Tailles de toile sur châssis de civière (impression sur toile): 20x20cm - 8x8 ", 30x30cm - 12x12", 50x50cm - 20x20 ", 70x70cm - 28x28", 100x100cm - 39x39 "
Options de taille d'impression sur verre acrylique (avec revêtement en verre véritable): 20x20cm - 8x8 ", 30x30cm - 12x12", 50x50cm - 20x20 ", 70x70cm - 28x28", 100x100cm - 39x39 "
Variantes d'impression d'affiche (papier de toile): 30x30cm - 12x12 ", 50x50cm - 20x20", 70x70cm - 28x28 ", 100x100cm - 39x39"
Variantes de taille d'impression en aluminium (matériau aluminium dibond): 20x20cm - 8x8 ", 30x30cm - 12x12", 50x50cm - 20x20 ", 70x70cm - 28x28", 100x100cm - 39x39 "
Cadre: Sans cadre

Informations sur les illustrations structurées

Titre du tableau: "Cliff Dwellers"
Catégorisation des œuvres: peinture
Catégorisation de l'art: l'art moderne
Classification temporelle: 20th siècle
Année de l'oeuvre: 1913
Âge de l'oeuvre: plus de 100 ans
Support original de l'oeuvre: huile sur toile
Taille de l'oeuvre originale: 40 3/16 x 42 1/16 pouces
Musée / emplacement: Musée d'art du comté de Los Angeles
Lieu du musée: Los Angeles, Californie, Etats-Unis d'Amérique
Disponible sous: www.lacma.org
Type de licence: domaine public
Avec l'aimable autorisation de: Musée d'art du comté de Los Angeles (www.lacma.org)

Tableau des détails de l'artiste

Nom : George soufflet
Noms d'alias: Bellouz Dzhorzh, Bellows George Wesley, בלאוס ג'ורג', George Bellows, George Wesley Bellows, Bellows, geo. bellows, Bellows George, geo bellows
Sexe de l'artiste: mâle
Nationalité de l'artiste: Américaine
Les professions: peintre, lithographe
Pays natal: États-Unis
Classement des artistes: artiste moderne
Âge au décès: 43 ans
Né dans l'année: 1882
Décédés: 1925

Ce texte est protégé par copyright ©, Artprinta (www.artprinta.com)

General specifications from Los Angeles County Museum of Art (© Copyright - by Los Angeles County Museum of Art - Musée d'art du comté de Los Angeles)

Among the first paintings acquired by the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, Cliff Dwellers is still its best known and most often reproduced American painting.

A large part of the work’s attraction to students of American history has been the fact that it appears to stand out among Ash Can school paintings as a statement of strong social criticism. This interpretation has been derived not so much from the appearance of the canvas as from the fact that it is very similar to the drawing Why Don’t They Go to the Country for a Vacation? (1913, LACMA), executed by Bellows for the socialist journal The Masses and published as the frontispiece of its issue of August 1913.

Almost all the Ash Can school artists who contributed to The Masses stopped short of creating outright political statements. For the most part, they simply considered themselves to be realist artists, producing vignettes of urban life that fit with the journal’s alert, down-to-earth editorial tone. Their consciously artistic, realist drawings of indulgent social satire are distinctly different from the bald editorial cartooning that also appeared in The Masses. Their paintings were yet further removed from the editorial tone of the magazine. John Sloan, for instance, who occasionally contributed scathing editorial cartoons to The Masses, did not express any sense of social criticism in his paintings, which portray the energy and simple pleasures of the poor.

One cannot find in Cliff Dwellers any trace of a change in tone from Bellows’s other urban scenes, whose subject and spirit center on the excitement and bustling activity of the city and the surging vitality of its lower classes. The spirit of the scene is established by the innocent joie de vivre of the brightly lighted foreground group of young women and children, especially the bawling, grinning, brawling boys so familiar in Bellows’s works. Another prominent note is the mother ascending the stairs on the far right, so reminiscent of the hard-working homemakers of Daumier and Chardin. On the far left, the bright colors of a market cart attract the eye. Except for the large building in deep shadow, the effect is that of sunshine, with a stiff breeze lifting some of the laundry. The irregular angles of the streets and the streetcar’s "Vesey Street" destination sign suggest that this is a location in the Lower East Side of Manhattan between the Bowery and Catherine Slip below Chatam Square.

Bellows’s record book indicates that the painting was completed in May 1913. He wrote the title originally as Cliff Dwellers but then crossed out the definite article. As noted in his record book during April 1913, Bellows completed three drawings for The Masses, including the museum’s drawing reproduced in the August 1913 issue. Its title was recorded as Why Don’t They Go to the Country for a Vacation? but is also identified, in parentheses, as "(study for) Cliff Dwellers." The fact that the drawing reproduced in The Masses was completed at a time when Bellows very well may have been working on Cliff Dwellers raises the question of whether that drawing may originally have been made in preparation for the painting and then given a second life as a frontispiece in the magazine. On the other hand, the drawing is a transfer lithograph reworked with pen and ink, an uncharacteristic working method for Bellows, but one that he used for other Masses illustrations, which suggests that the drawing was done especially for the magazine. Read more (Curator Notes)

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