- 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 ( White Roses in a Glass Vase ), a painting painted by Henri Fantin Latour in 1875.
We present to you an overview of the artist of the painting:
Henri Fantin Latour 1836 - 1904 was a French painter and print designer
He is best known for his flower paintings and group portraits of Parisian artists and writers.
Henri Jean Théodore Fantin Latour was born in Grenoble, Isère, and was the first to take drawing lessons with his father, who was a painter. He moved to Paris where he entered a drawing school, where he studied with Louis-Alexandre Perron and Horace Lecoq de Boisbaudran, an innovative and unconventional teacher who developed his own teaching method based on drawing from memory.
He attended the École des Beaux-Arts in Paris and, after studying there, spent a long time copying the works of the Old Masters at the Louvre. Although Fantine befriended many of the younger artists later associated with Impressionism, including Whistler and Manet, his own work remained conservative in style.
Early in his career, he produced a large number of self-portraits in chalk, charcoal and oil.
A member of the group that grew out of Impressionism, he was, according to Gustave Kahn, a kind of link between their painters and Romantic painting.
One of his still lifes was exhibited at the Royal Academy in London. It was the first of a long series, in which he subsequently presented several times almost every year and which always occupied a prominent place in the exhibition.