The trail of Pal's meteoric career extends from Rumania (where he was born a genuine prince) to London (where he went by the name Julius Mendes Price) in the 1880s and thence to Paris in the last decade of the century (where he adopted his shortened signature). His last change took place in 1900 when he moved to the U.S.- for good, as it turned out. His American work, usually in a far more conservative vein than his sensuous Parisian bicycle goddesses, was done mostly for magazines and the auto and film industries. One of his first commissions was a series of posters for Truth, the gossipy magazine focusing on New York society that started in 1881 as a weekly, becoming a monthly in 1899 with more emphasis on fashion and art. For this 1901 may issue, a Salome-style figure amidst a froth of seasonal cherry blossoms invites us to read all about it. All of Pals posters from his London and New York periods are quite hard to find; all the Truth designs are particularly scarce.
Giclee Prints are printed on heavy matte finish 180gsm German art paper using the finest Canon archival inks. Entry Level Art Prints are printed on 250Gsm satin paper. Quality Frame with a single white matboard and Acrylic glazing.
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Stretched Canvas is stretched by hand over 1.5" thick pine bars and printed on cotton poly matte finish canvas. Each is canvas hand coated with Hahnemuhle UV/Archive coating, these are Swiss quality best in industry canvases.
All our images are digitized from the original negative , printed and assembled in Switzerland to museum standards by our master printer.
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Artwork in this collection is from our own archives or licensed archives. Reproduction rights are reserved by the copyright owner. All of our prints' sizes refers to paper size. Our image sizes vary from image to image and respect the original ratio of the original poster. This means that there is a varying white border on all sides to keep the original ratio true to the original.