DECORARTS - Ater Piet Mondrian Composition in Blue, Red and Yellow Lithograph in Colours. Giclee Canvas Prints Wall Art for Home Decor 24x30 x1.5
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DECORARTS - Ater Piet Mondrian Composition in Blue, Red and Yellow Lithograph in Colours. Giclee Canvas Prints Wall Art for Home Decor 24x30 x1.5
MADE IN USA. Canvas Print Size: W 24 x H 30in Please note that actual colors may vary slightly due to monitor differences.
In the 1920s, Mondrian began to create the definitive abstract paintings for which he is best known. He limited his palette to white, black, gray, and the three primary colors, with the composition constructed from thick, black horizontal and vertical lines that delineated the outlines of the various rectangles of color or reserve.
Real handcrafted canvas prints produced and hand-stretched in California. UV-resistant colors. For giclee printing, the canvas used to actually print the final piece must be of archival quality. it is acid free cotton base. Museum-quality pieces printed, non-fading vibrant, saturated colors for up to 80-100 years.
Acid-free Cotton Canvas is Used to Avoid Effects the Light, Heat and Humidity May Have on The Canvas, Ensuring The Longevity of The Wall Art and Enhance The Details of Texture of Prints. Acid free Also Allows The Printed Color on The Canvas to Last Life Long.
Packed in a Sturdy Shipping Carton, Each Panel is Carefully Protected by Inflated Plastic Cushioning or Polystyrene Foam Installed at All Four Corners. All Wall Art are Ready to Hang, and Complimentary Professional Wall Art Hanging Tools, Such as: Gloves, Nails, and a Gradienter (level), are Included with Each Purchase.
Piet Mondrian, one of the founders of the Dutch modern movement De Stijl, is recognized for the purity of his abstractions and methodical practice by which he arrived at them. He radically simplified the elements of his paintings to reflect what he saw as the spiritual order underlying the visible world, creating a clear, universal aesthetic language within his canvases. In his best known paintings from the 1920s, Mondrian reduced his shapes to lines and rectangles and his palette to fundamental basics pushing past references to the outside world toward pure abstraction. His use of asymmetrical balance and a simplified pictorial vocabulary were crucial in the development of modern art, and his iconic abstract works remain influential in design and familiar in popular culture to this day.