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Print on textured canvas
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WahooArt use the latest printing technology to produce archival-quality textured cotton canvas prints that will give pleasure on your wall for a long time to come. Textured print gives to your painting reproduction a brushstroke/texture effect, which gives incredible look of a real oil canvas masterpiece.
WahooArt.com use only the most modern and efficient printing technology on our 100% cotton canvas 400Gsm, based on the Giclee printing procedure. This innovative high-resolution printing technique results in durable and spectacular looking prints of the highest quality. WahooArt.com only uses the highest quality inks, with extreme UV resistance. Your artwork will hold its beautiful colors for up to 75 years!
Textured print perfectly suits for Fine Art reproductions! WahooArt Team suggest to orderacrylic print for colorful,familly and modernphotos.
- FAQ 1/2 - FAQ 2/2 - Giclée print of your own
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Loading Leonardo Da Vinci biography....
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WahooArt.com (Leonardo Da Vinci)
Arts & Entertainment > Hobbies & Creative Arts > Artwork
https://EN.WahooArt.com/Art.nsf/Buy?Open&RA=5ZKCXA
WahooArt.com-A-5ZKCXA-PrintsOnCanvas-16x21.2inches-P438Z-EN-USD
PrintsOnCanvas [{A-5ZKCXA}]-Dim(16 x 21.2 inches (40.6 x 53.8 cm))-DC(MHZKF10)-Shipping(Slow)-NAMEPLATE-GlossyTextured-FRAME(P438Z)-Leonardo Da Vinci-John the Baptis
https://WahooArt.com/Art.nsf/O/5ZKCXA/$File/Leonardo-Da-Vinci-John-the-Baptis.jpg
Bacchus, formerly Saint John the Baptist, in the Musée du Louvre is based on a drawing by the Italian Renaissance artist Leonardo da Vinci but is presumed to have been executed by an unknown follower, perhaps in Leonardo's workshop. Sidney J. Freedberg assigns the drawing to Leonardo's second Milan period. Among the Lombard painters who have been suggested as possible authors are Cesare da Sesto, Marco d'Oggiono, Francesco Melzi, and Cesare Bernazzano. The painting shows a male figure with garlanded head and leopard skin, seated in an idyllic landscape. He points with his right hand off to the right, and with his left hand grasps his thyrsus. The painting originally depicted John the Baptist. In the late seventeenth century, between the years 1683 and 1693, it was overpainted and altered, to serve as Bacchus.
Leonardo Da Vinci
Leonardo Da Vinci
Oil
Oil