Bistre Sunflowers Acrylic Print
by Diana Ludwig
Product Details
Bistre Sunflowers acrylic print by Diana Ludwig. Bring your artwork to life with the stylish lines and added depth of an acrylic print. Your image gets printed directly onto the back of a 1/4" thick sheet of clear acrylic. The high gloss of the acrylic sheet complements the rich colors of any image to produce stunning results. Two different mounting options are available, see below.
Design Details
The row of sunflowers was outlined in bistre ink and the sunflowers lightly coloured in with coloured pencil. Bistre ink is so enjoyable because it... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
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Acrylic Print Tags
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Comments (1)
Artist's Description
The row of sunflowers was outlined in bistre ink and the sunflowers lightly coloured in with coloured pencil. Bistre ink is so enjoyable because it can be made from chimney soot and has a unique warm brown colour.
About Diana Ludwig
Diana is an artist who is happiest outdoors & a lazy bibliophiliac, who spelunks, rollerbades, picks up red efts, wintergreen berries, ox-eye daisies. Likes watching birds, foxes, antelopes, talks to barn owls, hikes, x-c skiis, watches butterflies, toads, praying mantises...snowdrops along the Clarion and bald eagles over, foxgloves down the Belltown way scrumbles around, planting, drawing, bogging, botanizing, stargazing, snowshoing, herbing, looking for bats & salamanders, backpacking, camping. When that's done, she reads, writes, paints & does other mixed media art, takes hours-long cyanotype photos, & plays with cats. Visit Ludwig main artist site to see more work I haven't listed yet. ...
$79.00
Ray Petersen
Hi Diana, I've enjoyed your site. I especially like "Bistre Sunflowers" and your photo "Cloud Pool". The freeness and sketchiness of the sunflower painting is exciting and fresh -sort of like a Zen painting. Also, there is something of Arshile Gorky ("biomorphoc forms") created by the negative space around the sunflowers. Very appealing. (I've just come back from the Gorky Retrospective at the Philadelphia Art Museum - a blockbluster. I also very much like the "Cloud Pool" photo. It would make for a terrific painting, I think. The batik-like quality of some of my work is just that. I use 'masking' the latex waterbase watercolor application in doing some of my acrylic work. I paint, apply masking compound on areas I want to save. Then, I paint over the panel and rub out the masking to reveal the paint below. Regards, Ray