Provides a "painted & authentic" style to images printed on canvas and mounted on real solid wood frames cut to measurement.
The mirrored edges give it a reflective effect and the entire image remains visible on the front.
Our canvas is professionally hand-stretched and layered with protective ink for a superior museum-grade finish.
Added to your wishlist
Adding to your wishlist in progress
Aluminum mounting added to your wishlist
Share this work
Share with your printing options
Link to be shared
Add to my wishlist
Additional products
Giclée Print
starting at $ 29
Giclée Print Standard frame sizes
starting at $ 27
Mounting on aluminium
starting at $ 49
Framed Giclée Print 12.5 " x 11 "
$ 99
More works byVermeer
Girl with a Pearl Earring - Jo...
30.5 x 35.8 cm
starting at $ 64
Girl Reading a Letter at an Op...
30.5 x 39.1 cm
starting at $ 68
The Milkmaid - Johannes Vermee...
30.5 x 34.2 cm
starting at $ 62
Saint Praxedis - Vermeer
30.5 x 37.2 cm
starting at $ 66
The Little Street - Vermeer
30.5 x 37.8 cm
starting at $ 66
Woman Holding a Balance - Verm...
30.5 x 34.4 cm
starting at $ 62
Lady at the Virginal with a Ge...
30.5 x 34.9 cm
starting at $ 62
Description
[vermeer] depicted Delft from across its harbor, where transport ships disembarked after sailing the inland waterways from the ports of Rotterdam and Schiedam. Beyond the frieze of Delft's massive protective walls and gates, which Vermeer cast in shadow to suggest their age and venerability, the city center glows with the warmth of a radiant sun. Above it all rises the tower of the Nieuwe Kerk, burial place of the Princes of Orange and symbolic heart of the city. See more
The stillness of the painting creates an aura of reverence for the city and its proud history. Although a few figures stand on the shore in the foreground, the harbor remains quiet, the long shadows forming visual bridges to the city beyond.
The painting's strength comes in part from its large scale, which allows the viewer to enter the space, but also from the tangible illusion of reality. Vermeer achieved this through his mastery of light and his ability to create textural effects. Buildings, for example, take on a physical presence through Vermeer's suggestive way of juxtaposing small dots of unmodulated color with brush strokes. He used a similar technique to suggest the reflection of water on the sides of boats. These diffuse reflections are comparable to those seen in a camera obscura, indicating that he may have designed this painting using this optical device.