Classic fresco printed and coated with glass - artist Lyubov Sergeyevna Popova

Starts from

219

Available

Classic fresco printed and coated with glass - artist Lyubov Sergeyevna Popova

219

Add to cart
Price

219

  • A wall painting printed from the world's most ancient classical fine art
  • It gives the place elegance and elegance, reflected in the precision of colours, art and beauty
  • It matches the colors of classic and modern furniture and decor.
  • Suitable for home or office walls
  • High-quality printing that shows the colors and details of the painting in a way that illustrates the magic of old paintings
  • Coated with glass
  • The classic frame was used to reflect the elegance of the painting and evoke a charming, classic feel
  • Available in several options and sizes


A painting called (Composition with Figures) painted by Lyubov Sergeyevna Popova


We present to you an overview of the artist of the painting:

Lyubov Sergeyevna Popova 1889-1924 was a leading Soviet Russian artist, illustrator, and designer.


Popova was born in Ivanovsky, near Moscow, to the wealthy family of Sergei Maksimovich Popov, a highly successful textile merchant and a powerful patron of the arts. Zubova, came from a highly cultured family.


Popova grew up with a keen interest in art, especially Italian Renaissance painting. At the age of eleven she began formal art lessons at home. She first enrolled at Yaltinskaia's Gymnasium for Women, then at Arseneva's Gymnasium in Moscow. At the age of 18 she was studying with Stanislav Zhukovsky, and in 1908 she entered the private studios of Konstantin Yuon and Ivan Dudin. In 1912 until 1913, she began attending the studios of the Cubist painters Henri Le Fauconnier and Jean Metzinger at the Académie La Palette in Paris.


Popova traveled widely investigating and learning from diverse styles of painting, but it was Old Russian icons, paintings by Giotto and works by Italian masters of the 15th and 16th centuries that interested her most. In 1909 she traveled to Kiev, then in 1910 to Pskov and Novgorod. The following year, she visited other ancient Russian cities, including Saint Petersburg, to study icons. In 1912 she worked in the Moscow studio known as "The Tower" with Ivan Aksenov and Vladimir Tatlin, and also visited Sergei Shchukin's collection of modern French paintings. In 1912-1913 she studied art with Nadezhda Udaltsova in Paris, where she met Alexander Archipenko and Osip Zadkine in 1913. Returning to Russia in the same year, she worked with Tatlin, Udaltsova and the Vesnin brothers. In 1914 she traveled to France and Italy to develop Cubism and Futurism .

  • mada
  • credit_card
  • credit_card
  • bank
  • stc_pay
  • apple_pay
  • tabby_installment
  • tamara_installment
  • mahally_customer_wallet
  • cod