Furnishings and accessories are very important elements of interior architectural renderings. Contact Perspective Dimensions Inc. today for a service quote.
Art.com | We Are Art We exist so you can have the art you love. Art.com gives you easy access to incredible art images and top-notch craftsmanship. High-Quality Framed Art Prints Our high-end framed wall art is printed on premium paper using non-toxic, archival inks that protect against UV light to resist fading. Experience unmatched quality and style as you choose from a wide range of designs to enhance your room décor. Professionally Crafted Framed Wall Art Attention to detail is at the heart of our process, as we exclusively use 100% solid wood frames that include 4-ply white core matboard and durable, frame-grade clear acrylic for clarity, long-lasting protection of the artwork and unrivaled quality. With a thoughtfully selected frame and mat combination, this piece is designed to complement your art and create a visually appealing display. Easy-to-Hang & Ready-to-Display Artwork Each framed art piece comes with hanging hardware affixed to the back of the frame, allowing for easy and convenient installation. Ready to display right out of the box. Handcrafted in the USA. A Lady at the Virginal with a Gentleman (The Music Lesson), ca 1662. Found in the collection of the Royal Collection, London. Travel Art Art is the best way of seeing the world when travel isn’t possible. Explore our curation of travel art for a trip around the globe. See from tourist favorites landmarks–the Eiffel tower– to hidden gems like the breathtaking landscapes of Yosemite National Park. Whether you find a cozy reminder of home, your dream destinations, or even cool maps of the world, our handcrafted frames will give it the perfect finishing touch. The Print This giclée print delivers a vivid image with maximum color accuracy and exceptional resolution. The standard for museums and galleries around the world, giclée is a printing process where millions of ink droplets are “sprayed” onto high-quality paper. With the great degree of detail and smooth transitions of color gradients, giclée prints appear much more realistic than other reproduction prints. The high-quality paper (235 gsm) is acid free with a smooth surface. Paper Type: Giclee Print Finished Size: 18" x 24" Arrives by Fri, Apr 26 Product ID: 34986420465A
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Books and Flowers - Bruce Yardley British b.1962-
Explore *Huismus' 10830 photos on Flickr!
PASSION FOR ART: Meural Canvas II combines modern design, state-of-the-art technology, and passion for art all over the world letting you explore and show off more of what you love in lifelike detail. SLEEK MODERN DESIGN: Meural Canvas II is designed for any space. It has a sleek, modern-meets-classic design and comes in two sizes (21.5” diagonal display and 27” diagonal display) and four colors (black, dark wood, light wood, white). SHOWCASE YOUR OWN PHOTOS: Easily upload, crop and view your own photography in its fullest and richest detail, and save on printing and framing costs. ENDLESS DIGITAL LIBRARY: Bring the world’s museums and galleries to your walls with Meural’s endless digital library of 30,000+ works of iconic and emerging art with the Meural Membership. (sold separately, $69.99 annually). EASY TO CONTROL: It’s simple, just wave your hand or tap the Meural app (available on iOS or Android) to explore art, personalize your Canvas, schedule display times, or adjust settings. Or relax and use supported voice controls (such as: Alexa) to find a new masterpiece. PATENTED TRUEART TECHNOLOGY: With TrueArt Technology, Meural Canvas II -- a WiFi connected 1080p HD display with an anti-glare finish and adjustable backlighting delivers lifelike art at every angle. HANG HORIZONTALLY OR VERTICALLY: The Meural Canvas II automatically detects orientation-- using the Swivel Mount (sold separately) it’s easy to rotate between a horizontal or vertical display.
Telephone - Isabel Quintanilla , 1996. Spanish b. 1938- Oil on canvas, 110 x 100 cm.
About Domestic Vacations: The Dutch proverb "a Jan Steen household" originated in the 17th century and is used today to refer to a home in disarray, full of rowdy children and boisterous family gatherings. The paintings of Steen, along with those of other Dutch and Flemish genre painters, helped inspire this body of work. I am the oldest of nine children and now the mother of three. As Steen’s personal narratives of family life depicted nearly 400 yrs. ago, the conflation of art and life is an area I have explored in photographing the everyday life of my family and the lives of my sisters and their families at home. These images are both fictional and auto-biographical, and reflect not only our lives today and as children growing up in a large family, but also move beyond the documentary to explore the fantastic elements of our everyday lives, both imagined and real. The stress, the chaos, and the need to simultaneously escape and connect are issues that I investigate in this body of work. We live in a culture where we are both "child centered" and "self-obsessed." The struggle between living in the moment versus escaping to another reality is intense since these two opposites strive to dominate. Caught in the swirl of soccer practices, play dates, work, and trying to find our way in our "make-over" culture, we must still create the space to find ourselves. The expectations of family life have never been more at odds with each other. These issues, as well as the relationship between the domestic landscape of the past and present, are issues I have explored in these photographs. I believe there are moments that can be found throughout any given day that bring sanctuary. It is in finding these moments amidst the stress of the everyday that my life as a mother parallels my work as an artist, and where the dynamics of family life throughout time seem remarkably unchanged. As an artist and as a mother, I believe life’s most poignant moments come from the ability to fuse fantasy and reality: to see the mythic amidst the chaos.
Tim Jenison, a Texas-based inventor, attempts to solve one of the greatest mysteries in the art world: How did Dutch master Johannes Vermeer manage to paint so photo-realistically 150 years before the invention of photography? Here's how he conducted his experiment.
Our Giclees are Printed and Shipped in USA from an Owner-Operated company that has been in business since 1978 so purchase with confidence that you are buying from an experienced seller. All Posters and Canvases will be Shipped Rolled in a heavy tube. High Quality Matte Paper Stock and High Quality Canvas Material used for your purchase. The size selected will be the size of the Image. However, the paper/canvas the image is printed on will be larger to accommodate a mat for the Posters on Matte Paper or to be stretched for Images on Canvas. Kindly understand, colors may vary depending on your monitor settings. ******************************************** JVermeer-zero-15
THE DEXTER HOUSE This is part 1 of a series on the Dexter House kitchen renovation. Part 2 (the Reveal) can be found here . When we first toured the Dexter House in October of 2014, one of the things that stood out to me the most was the kitchen. It had to go.&am
I create photographic floral still lifes with natural chiaroscuro lighting, inspired by Dutch Golden Age painters. Order as art prints >>
One of the leading portrait painters in America, by the time she was 30, is the featured artist for April, in my Woman Artist Series -- CECILIA BEAUX Self Portrait, 1894, oil, 25x20 Here are 10 things to know about Cecilia Beaux, along with 10 examples of her work and a few images of Cecilia, too: 1. Born in Philadelphia in 1855, Cecilia Beaux was raised by her grandmother and aunts, after her mother's early death, only 12 days after her birth. She was the youngest daughter of Jean Adolphe Beaux, a silk manufacturer, originally from Provence, France, and teacher Cecilia Kent Leavitt. Her mother's sudden death hit her father so hard that he left Cecilia and her 3-year old sister with their grandmother and returned to France for two years. Encouraged to pursue her interest in art, she took her first art lessons at the age of 16. She studied with several local painters and later went to the school run by Dutch painter Frances Van der Wielen, for two years. She participated in her first group exhibitions during the late 1870's. Beaux's paintings won awards and enthusiastic reviews from the start. A Little Girl (Fanny Travis Cochran), 1887, oil, 36 x 29 2. Early in her art career, Cecilia earned money by painting china, before turning to portraiture, often using family members and friends as her subject matter. In these paintings, she explored the individual's character, as well as the complexities of family relationships. She also attended portrait classes at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts -- but, decided against the painter, Thomas Eakins, as a teacher. Instead, she studied privately with William Sartain, whose approach she preferred over Eakins'. Sartain helped her become proficient in painting the figure from life. Cecilia Beaux Harold and Mildred Colton, 1887, oil, 55x41 3. "The Last Days of Infancy", painted in 1885, was the painting that effectively launched her artistic career. This double portrait, picturing her sister, Etta, and her nephew, Henry Drinker, goes far beyond portraiture. It makes a universal statement about a particular stage of childhood. Cecilia considered the arrangement of four hands at the center of the composition to be the painting's symbolic crux. Les Derniers Jours d'Enfance (The Last Days of Infancy), 1885, oil, 46x54 Beaux's painting was inspired by Whistler, and won the Mary Smith Prize at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts. It was also accepted for the Paris Salon in 1887 -- and sealed her reputation as an artist of international standing. 4. In 1888, Cecilia traveled to Paris to study, becoming acquainted with the Impressionist movement while there. She first submitted work to the Paris Salon in 1883, and then five years later, she began a self-financed 2-year stay in the City of Light (1888-90). She had a successful showing at the 1889 Salon. It was in Paris that she made a firm decision to become a portraitist. In a letter to her Uncle Will, she wrote, "People seem to interest me more than anything in the world, and that's the reason for my success". Lady Darwin (Maud DuPuy), 1889, pastel, 19x13 5. Beaux returned to the United States in 1891, settling in New York. She soon became a much sought-after portraitist, whose sitters included many prominent politicians, writers, and artists -- including George Clemenceau, Teddy Roosevelt, his wife Edith, and his daughter. In 1892, Beaux was invited to teach at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts -- a rare honor for a woman. She traveled widely, lectured often, and published her autobiography in 1930. Man with the Cat, Portrait of Henry Sturgis Drinker (one of her best-known works.) 6. Cecilia Beaux combined new ideas and techniques learned from the Impressionists in Paris, with her own style of portraiture. Beaux's expressive brushwork, rich palette, effective use of relaxed poses for her sitters, caused her work to be compared frequently with the portraits of John Singer Sargent. Her fusion of the French style with her own distinctively American taste became her signature style. Sita and Sarita, 1893, oil, 37x25 7. Three of her most outstanding works are The Dreamer, 1984, Dorothea & Francesca, 1898, and Sita & Sarita, 1893. The Dreamer is a portrait of her friend, Caroline Kilby Smith. Generally, her sitters are in unconventional poses -- as in this painting. The sitter, Caroline, looks absentmindedly at the viewer. A critic described this painting as an "odd work of unsimple simplicity". The Dreamer, 1893, oil, 33x25 One of her loveliest portraits, Dorothea & Francesca, is not only inventive in its composition, but also illustrates Beaux's skillful handling of pale colors. Dorothea & Francesca, 1898, oil 8. Cecilia Beaux was a strong-willed, independent woman her whole life. She never married, choosing instead to focus on her art. Instead of adopting the conventional roles of wife and mother, the artist focused on developing a career, and went on to become one of the leading portraitists of the day. 9. Another side of Beaux's art is shown in the painting, After the Meeting, 1914. Here, the artist's friend, Dorothy Gilder, gestures animatedly -- her white gloved hands making a stark contrast against the dark wall and the floral-patterned chair. This painting has the lively, intimate quality of a candid photograph that catches the subject in mid-action. 10. Beaux's art received widespread recognition during her lifetime. In 1924, the Uffizi in Florence, Italy, asked her to submit a self-portrait -- an honor bestowed on only three other Americans. Cecilia Beaux died in Gloucester, Mass, at the venerable age of 87 -- after a nearly 40-year career. Mother and Daughter, 1898, oil, 83x44
Design detail of a projected Peace Palace, The Hague
Perspective Dimensions Inc. offers both traditional Watercolor Renderings and Pen and Ink Perspective Renderings. Contact us today for more information.
Sections of the Court of Justice inside a proposed Peace Palace, The Hague
If you like Architectural Illustrations and Sketches, Paul Hill is the person to go to. More than sketches for proposed buildings, they look like art pieces, you can just hang on the wall. Having travelled a lot, since a young age, this is how Hill describes his journey, "Born in the UK...bred in Africa...and survived over a decade of life in the Austrian Alps!". We have tried to bring together as many different aspects of his drawing portfolio, including interiors, exteriors and drawings before and after colouring. All the drawings featured have been accomplished with Pen and Ink. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it.
Jane Perkins creates art out of discarded or once loved objects that have since been forgotten. Everything from buttons, toys and jewellery to old shells and beads. Inspired by impressionist art a...
By sporting a bonnet fashioned out of toilet paper and clutching a celery-stalk cigarette, people are finding ways to engage with their favorite artworks from a distance. This week, the Getty challenged folks to imitate classic pieces with whatever they can find around their homes and since has gotten thousands of hilarious (and well-done) responses. The Los Angeles museum’s call was inspired by the account Between Art & Quarantine, which has been asking people to choose three aspects of their favorite works to recreate using anything they’ve got at home, hence the pets, kids, and vegetables in the mix. More
“Captúrame como lo haría Rembrandt” es un grupo en las redes sociales donde las personas publican cosplay de obras maestras. El contenido es creado por los seguidores, quienes mandan sus fotografías en estilo de cuadros y esculturas. Algunas personas tratan de repetir los detalles de las clásicas obras maestras con exactitud, mientras que otros lo hacen con un buen sentido del humor. Al final, el resultado siempre es sorprendentemente genial.
If you like Architectural Illustrations and Sketches, Paul Hill is the person to go to. More than sketches for proposed buildings, they look like art pieces, you can just hang on the wall. Having travelled a lot, since a young age, this is how Hill describes his journey, "Born in the UK...bred in Africa...and survived over a decade of life in the Austrian Alps!". We have tried to bring together as many different aspects of his drawing portfolio, including interiors, exteriors and drawings before and after colouring. All the drawings featured have been accomplished with Pen and Ink. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it. Press the Image to Enlarge it.
The Goldfinch by Carel Fabritius. In various sizes. Giclee printed on high quality matte canvas using archival inks. Archival inks can last 75 years if kept out of direct sunlight. Prints are not framed or mounted. All prints have an approximate 1/2" white border in addition to the print size. Items ship free to the U.S. in one business day. Prints are carefully rolled and shipped in a crush-proof tube or sturdy mailer. Available in other sizes, just send me a message.
For Krysta and Joel, Tucson is more than just home. The two artists and shop owners relocated to Arizona from the Pacific Northwest, and planted roots in the creative community.