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Name | | Trappers Entering Old Santa Fe |
Price, USD | | 600.00 |
Status | | For sale, available |
Size, cm
| | 50.8 x 40.6 cm /switch |
Artist | | Richard Nervig |
Year made | | 2008-01-15 |
Edition | | Original |
Style | |
Impressionism |
Theme | |
Landscape |
Media | |
Oil on canvasboard |
Description | |
This is a 16 x 20 inch oil painting on canvasboard by me. The painting is signed by me in the lower left corner. The scene depicts two trappers entering oild Santa Fe about 1860. They have been trapping beaver in New Mexico and Colorado and have come to trade or sell their furs. I hope you enjoy the painting. |
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Same Style Impressionism |
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An art movement founded in France in the last third of the 19th century. Impressionist artists sought to break up light into its component colors and render its ephemeral play on various objects. The artist's vision was intensely centered on light and the ways it transforms the visible world. This style of painting is characterized by short brush strokes of bright colors used to recreate visual impressions of the subject and to capture the light, climate and atmosphere of the subject at a specific moment in time. The chosen colors represent light which is broken down into its spectrum components and recombined by the eyes into another color when viewed at a distance (an optical mixture). The term was first used in 1874 by a journalist ridiculing a landscape by Monet called Impression - Sunrise. |
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