With its full text, the poster informed the public that an exhibition of Levys work was being held at the Salon de la Plume (better known as the Salon des Cent) from January 25 to February 14, 1897. This pertinent information was added to the portrait of a synagogue worshipper, one of Levys many illustrations from Jewish life. He faces the Hebrew word Mizrach, meaning the place where the sun rises, as traditionally the faithful have faced East, towards Jerusalem, when praying. This version of the poster is #9 in a limited-edition of 50 hand-signed and numbered posters.
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.