Ad Parnassum By Paul Klee, an excellent solution for home decoration This abstract piece of art will improve your mood every day, make your home more attractive and interesting, and due to that, the price of your real estate will grow. If you have an apartment for rent, it is better if you hang this art print on a wall because it is colorful and will make your clients more happy. There is nothing positive if they look at a gray, empty wall.
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Fancy wall art for home decor.
It Will raise the price of your property.
It can enhance the atmosphere in a room, and make it more positive.
Your attitude will be excellent every day.
Ad Parnassum print on Canvas is a symbol of a meticulous creation of an experienced artist. It is made from ultra-precision print technology as well as fade-resistant archival inks. This is a simple artwork popularly used in children’s rooms.
About the Ad Parnassum By Paul Klee:
Artist: Paul Klee
Name: Ad Parnassum
Type: Printed canvas
Quality of the canvas:
Permanent Waterproof
Bright-colored
Permanent sun-resistant
Some words about the Ad Parnassum painting:
Paul Klee created the pointillist painting Ad Parnassum. The painting is available to view at the Bern Art Museum.
Analysis
It was created while Klee was teaching at the Dusseldorf Academy three years after his trip to Egypt. The drawing process began with the application of large squares of muted color to the canvas without the use of a primer. Klee then printed the smaller squares in white and another diluted color. The pyramid shape, outlined by stamped lines, dominates the composition.
A formation, which can be viewed as a ceiling or a hill, was most clearly influenced by the Egyptian Pyramids, the Niesen, which overlooks Lake Thun in the artist’s hometown, and the titular Mount Parnassus. A bright orange circle represents the sun above the pyramid on the right.
Ad Parnassum was written during a period of transition in Klee’s artistic style and is now regarded as a masterpiece of pointillism. From June 2007 to May 2008, an exhibition dedicated to this work was held at Paul Klee’s Zentrum.
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