Posts Tagged ‘prints’

Canvas Prints Are An Ideal Way To Improve The Look Of Your Bedroom.

Printing your photos to canvas prints is a nice idea for a gift or as a piece of artwork for your home. A lot of people print photos because it’s cheap and can be turn into a great piece of artwork.

They are available in a variety of shapes and sizes and you can even get your own unique print done. Obviously, the larger the print you select, the more you will have to pay for it.

Canvas prints are a great way to decorate your home and if you get your own design done then they can be very sentimental and this makes them popular. They are very cheap and you should be able to get hold of a basic print for about 10 GBP.

You won’t find it hard to find options that suit your needs. There are plenty of options available online in art shops. Art that is chosen by you and perhaps printed from something of yours will be entirely unique.

Even if you’re not great at photography you will find that canvas art makes anything look great. Being unique in your decoration is important these days and this is why canvas prints are so popular – no one else will have what you have.

Artwork will always look great so it really doesn’t matter what you choose as the style. A lot of people create prints and art as gifts for their friends and family and they are certainly a fabulous gift to give.

It’ll be easy to find somewhere to get your art work done. All you have to do is find a canvas printing store and they should be able to help you. Canvas prints are a nice unique way of buying a gift but you can also use the pre made art that are available in stores and online.

Canvas artwork is very flexible and you don’t have to use your own images if you don’t have any decent ones. You can find stock photos on the net which are ideal for prints of art.

Pre made prints are usually more popular because they are easy to find and buy when compared to the things involved in printing your own. You should be able to find canvas art in most big stores that also sell clocks, home items and bedding or furniture.

You should be able to find what you need with ease and most canvas prints will suit any room in your home so it’s up to you what you do. Living rooms and dining rooms are best suited to larger artwork because they won’t be overcrowded.

Shops like Tesco, Matalan and even Debenhams sell large and small canvas art so you should find plenty of choices in stores. You will find that artwork is so popular because it is easy to find and suits most rooms in your home.

Overall, canvas prints are cheap, easy to find and suitable for all rooms in your home so you should really consider them today. As long as you do your research and make sure that you find prints that are right for you and your tastes then you should be fine.

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The Art Of Pablo Picasso – Cubism & Fauvism

Pablo Picasso, born in Malaga, Spain in 1881, was the son of an art teacher who encouraged him into the art world, and quickly recognised his talent. After joining the Barcelona School of Fine Arts at the age of 14 Picasso progressed quickly and soon convinced others of his extraordinary talent and creativity as an artist.

Picasso spent the years of 1900 to 1906 in what is referred to as the Blue and Rose Period. The Blue period involved the use of blue in most of Picasso’s works to represent a negativity and sadness of his paintings and those within them. Art experts, even those who rejected his later innovative style, respected his blue period. The rose period signalled a choice of brighter pink tones over the previous blues.

Henri Matisse, Joan Miro and George Braques all became friends of Pablo Picasso after he moved to the capital of arts, Paris, in 1904. Here Picasso was introduced to new art movements by its very influences, such as French Fauvism and Picasso.

Picasso was a big fan of the works of Paul Cezanne and this was the inspiration for the newly founded art movement of Cubism, and later, Synthetic Cubism. Fellow artists George Braque and Juan Gris were also key to the principles of Cubism.

Picasso painted Guernica in 1937 as a protest against an air attack during the Spanish Civil War and is one of his best known paintings, not only for its quality, but also what it symbolised. His symbolic styles were continued in Dying horse and Weeping woman.

Guernica by Picasso remained at the museum of Modern Art, New York until 1981. After that it was taken to the Prado Museum in Madrid, Spain and then the Queen Sofia Center of Art, also Madrid in 1992. Picasso had prevented the Guernica returning to Spain until the end of Fascist rule by General Franco.

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