Jean-Claude Cubaynes:
Picture "Champ de coquelicots", framed
Proportional view
Picture "Champ de coquelicots", framed
Jean-Claude Cubaynes:
Picture "Champ de coquelicots", framed

Quick info

ars mundi Exclusive Edition | limited, 199 copies | signed | reproduction on canvas | on stretcher frame | framed | size 53 x 53 cm

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Product no. IN-714508.R1

Delivery time: approx. 2 weeks

Frame variant
Picture "Champ de coquelicots", framed
Jean-Claude Cubaynes: Picture "Champ de coquelicots", framed

Detailed description

Picture "Champ de coquelicots", framed

"Champ de coquelicots - Poppy Meadow": As if summer has been captured in this picture, the poppy meadow shines in the sunlight.

Brilliant, authentic reproduction in Fine Art Giclée, transferred directly onto 100% cotton artist canvas and mounted on a wooden stretcher frame. Elegant hand-glided solid wood frame. Limited and signed edition of 199 copies. ars mundi Exclusive Edition. Size 53 x 53 cm.

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Portrait of the artist Jean-Claude Cubaynes

About Jean-Claude Cubaynes

Born in 1944, French painter

Jean-Claude Cubaynes' art is unmistakably inspired by the great works of Impressionists, especially Monet, to whom he pays personal homage with his painting "The Garden of Giverny". He shares with them the accuracy of the play of colour and light in natural scenes, an extremely precise style of painting, fuelled by a great knowledge of optical effects and – last but certainly not least – the great admiration for garden and landscape depictions.

Cubaynes, born in 1944, studied at the Ecole des Arts Appliqués de Paris at the age of 15. Since 1966, he has worked as a freelance artist. Starting in 1970, his works have been presented in countless national and international solo exhibitions.

It is not surprising that Cubaynes has fans worldwide: With the greatest subtlety and clarity, he knows how to capture the enchanted magic of a sprawling garden or the atmosphere of a meadow in bloom; indeed, he conveys in his works the paradisiacal quality inherent in these places, and that is precisely what the Impressionists were interested in. Cubayne's pictures have an immediate effect: The viewers believe they have been transported into his landscapes with all their senses.

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