Elegance, extreme lightness and natural brilliance of colours in every detail.
Combining modernity and lightness, aluminium lamination offers a demanding clientele high resolution with brilliant and natural colours that highlight every detail of the work.
With its robust and waterproof surface, it is also suitable for wet rooms such as kitchens, bathrooms and outdoor rooms.
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Print on canvas
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Giclée Print
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Giclée Print Standard frame sizes
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Framed Giclée Print 9.5 " x 12.5 "
$ 127
Description
This unfinished portrait by Leonardo da Vinci of a young woman with tousled hair (hence her nickname, scapigliata) is mainly a brush drawing with a little pigment, its treatment being similar to that of other incomplete works by the artist.
However, the contrast between the drawing of the hair and neck and the refined modelling of the face must be intentional.
It suggests that Leonardo was inspired by a passage (well known in the Renaissance) by the Roman author Pliny the Elder. See more
Pliny pointed out that the great artist Apelles left his last representation of the Venus de Cos unfinished and that the work nevertheless aroused more admiration than his first completed painting of the goddess.
About Leonardo da Vinci
Leonardo da Vinci was born on 15 April 1452. He was the son of a notary and a peasant woman who never married.
In 1466, he began working in the workshop of a sculptor named Andrea del Verrocchio. It was here that he began to paint, sculpt and draw.
Leonardo da Vinci became a painter, sculptor, engineer, inventor, musician, writer and architect, and was considered a great genius. He was always very interested in anatomical studies of the human body and could draw human organs in great detail. See more
He was accepted into the painters' guild in Florence in 1472 and opened his own painting and sculpture studio. His fame began to grow and he was commissioned to produce many different and very important works.
Throughout his life, he was in the service of several dukes who commissioned sculptures and paintings from him, but what really interested him was inventing new vehicles, weapons and objects.
All the works of Leonardo da Vinci are known, but the most famous are: the painting of "The Last Supper", which he painted on a fresco in the monastery of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Milan; "La Gioconda", better known as "La Monna Lisa"; and "Vitruvian Man", a famous drawing of a man with four arms and four legs, in which he attempted to study the human body.
He also made many sculptures, but none of them have survived to the present day.
Although he was always creating and building new works, the struggles that took place during his life, as well as the struggles and rebellions that took place after his death, are responsible for the fact that many of his creations were destroyed, burnt or lost, including his remains that were thrown away in an unknown place after a war.
He died on 2 May 1519 in France.