Women at the source (art prints)

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Art Prints

The reproduction is rolled on itself and shipped in a rigid tube. "Fine Art Giclee" print is commonly used for the professional reproduction of works of art. This inkjet printing technique uses natural pigments that are highly resistant to light.

  • Printed on mat paper Fine Art Special 260 g/m2

  • Work takes into account the white margin. The final dimension includes the white margin.

Art Prints

About the Artwork

Women at the source

Original work by: Sérusier, Paul PAUL SÉRUSIER (1864 - 1927) Femmes à la source (détail), vers 1899 I Détrempe sur toile. H. 131 ; L. 57,4 cm I Paris, musée d'Orsay © Photo musée d'Orsay, dist. Rmn - GP - P. Schmidt I © Rmn - Grand Palais, Paris 2019 - IC 60 0520

The work and its artist

Paul Sérusier (1864-1927)

Paul Sérusier is a French symbolist painter and one of the initiators of the Nabis movement. In 1885, he joined the Académie Julian, a private Parisian school of painting and sculpture created by the painter Rodolphe Julian (1839-1907). He is interested in orphism (the doctrine of ancient Greece based on the myth of Orpheus) or theosophy (religious syncretism according to which all religions contain some truth). The Nabis group was then joined by other artists such as Édouard Vuillard, but it lasted only about ten years. Dispersion took place around 1900.