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SNOW LEOPARD with Cub, XLarge Canvas Giclee, Clancy Cherry

$ 15.81

Availability: 20 in stock

Description

Snow Leopard
By: Clancy Cherry
Giclee print on canvas
The image size is: 36"x24"
This giclee canvas print was limited to an edition size of: 1000
Signed by Giclee Master
Certification of edition affixed by publisher
Publisher: International Galleries Inc.
Condition: New, never framed, stored flat
This canvas giclee print will be shipped rolled in a tube.
Please note: If this print is a ‘signed and numbered’ print and we have included a photograph of the number or something showing the number – we are NOT promising you will receive THAT numbered print. We have more than one of the print and the photo is of one of them.
Clancy Cherry:
Clancy Cherry received her Fine Arts degree from the University of Texas, Austin. She taught portrait/figure painting in Berkley, California for several years before returning to Texas with her husband.
She has traveled extensively on safaris to photograph the wild animals she uses in her work. Ms. Cherry spends in excess of two months in order to produce her paintings. A familiar comment on her wildlife paintings at her art shows is that she "makes the animal come alive through their eyes".
About the print:
This art is a limited edition "g
iclee"
(pronounced ghee-clay) print. A
"giclee" print
is a high-resolution digital print that is created by a series of tiny jets spraying millions of droplets of printing ink onto the highest quality archival artists' canvas. The spray generates more than four million droplets of ink per second; hence, the name "giclee", which is French for "fine spray." A precise computer control panel insures consistency of hue, value, and density. "Giclees" are of such phenomenal quality that even some art experts have difficulty telling a "giclee" from an original. This fact has prompted museums and collectors to substitute "giclees" for originals, thereby safeguarding priceless works in vaults. Since the "giclee" process produces a combination of 512 chromatic changes (with over three and one-half million colors possible) and the resolution is two to three times that of lithographs or serigraphy, a "giclee" captures every nuance of an original.