Feature

●MADE IN USA. Canvas Print Size: W 30 x H 24 in Total Framed Size: 35.5x28.5" Brand Quality: production from one of the worlds leading wall decor manufacturers, DecorArts a registered Trademark.
●Nothing is quite so elegant as a painting portraying the graceful art of ballet. With his eye for hard realism, Degas obsessively studied and captured the movement and glamour of the ballerinas of Frances belle epoch, or Beautiful Era.
●Giclee Print Technology: Using archival-quality inks onto acid free cotton canvases, giclee printing guarantees incredible detail, phenomenal quality, and vibrant colors. Saturated colors for up to 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.
●Real Handcrafted Canvas Prints produced in California, Packed in Carton Box, Each Panel is Carefully Sealed by Air column Corner Wrap Protection. Plus Free Professional Picture Hanging Tools, Include Gloves, Nails, and Gradienter (level).

[32.00   x 40.00   Napoleon]




[32.00   x 40.00   Sea and Cliff]




[35.25   x 43.25   Four Dancers]




[28.50   x 34.50   Tiger in Tropical Storm]




[35.25   x 43.25   Blossoming Almond Tree]




[24.00   x 30.00   Bal Du Moulin De La Galette]




[24.00   x 30.00   Cafe Terrace]




[20.00   x 24.00   Impression Sunrise]




[24.50   x 28.50   Impression Sunrise]




[16.00   x 20.00   Bal Du Moulin De La Galette]




[32.00   x 40.00   The School of Athens]




[20.00   x 24.00   Wanderer Above Sea of Fog]




[24.00   x 30.00   Tiger in Tropical Storm]




[24.50   x 28.50   Cafe Terrace]




[32.00   x 40.00   Starry Night]




[24.00   x 30.00   The School of Athens]




[24.50   x 28.50   Wanderer Above Sea of Fog]




[28.50   x 34.50   In the Meadow]




[35.25   x 43.25   Indian Summer]




[24.50   x 28.50   Domaine St Joseph]




[24.50   x 28.50   Under the Trees]




[16.00   x 20.00   Impression Sunrise]




[35.25   x 43.25   Dancers in Pink and Green]




[16.00   x 20.00   Dancers in Pink and Green]




[28.50   x 34.50   Girl With a Pearl Earring]




[20.00   x 24.00   Sea and Cliff]




[24.00   x 30.00   Dancers in Pink and Green]




[24.50   x 28.50   Twelve Sunflowers]




[28.50   x 34.50   Indian Summer]




[24.50   x 28.50   Dancers in Pink and Green]




[24.00   x 30.00   Blossoming Almond Tree]




[24.00   x 30.00   Twelve Sunflowers]




[32.00   x 40.00   Domaine St Joseph]




[20.50   x 24.50   Girl With a Pearl Earring]




[24.50   x 28.50   Blossoming Almond Tree]




[24.00   x 30.00   Trichromatic]




[28.50   x 34.50   Trichromatic]




[24.50   x 28.50   Napoleon]




[28.50   x 34.50   Cafe Terrace]




[24.00   x 30.00   In the Meadow]





Description

At the ballet, in the wings and classrooms of the magnificent Palais Garnier, Edgar Degas found a world that excited both his taste for classical beauty and his eye for modern realism. Though he didn t paint many stage performances, his interest lay behind the scenes as he recorded the hidden side of the glitz and glamour, in which some of the city s poorest girls pushed themselves to be the best dancers they could be on stage.

Impressionists painted the realities of the world around them using bright, "dazzling" colors, concentrating primarily on the effects of light, and hoping to infuse their scenes with immediacy. They wanted to express their visual experience in that exact moment. Despite the fact that his work fit in with Impressionist ideals, Degas rejected the label of Impressionist, not aligning with his contemporaries who primarily studies landscapes and painted plein air. Striving to capture human movement in his art, Degas himself explained, "no art was ever less spontaneous than mine. What I do is the result of reflection and of the study of the great masters; of inspiration, spontaneity, temperament, I know nothing." Nonetheless, he is described more accurately as an Impressionist than as a member of any other movement. His scenes of Parisian life, his off-center compositions, his experiments with color and form, and his friendship with several key Impressionist artists all relate him intimately to the Impressionist movement. His signature off kilter compositions are reminiscent of photography, a technology that was gaining popularity at the time and changing the way people thought of art in a major way.