Carl Blechen, 1829 - Afternoon in Capri - fine art print
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Afternoon in Capri is a painting by Carl Blechen in the year 1829. The over 190 years old original measures the size - 91 x 130 cm - frame: 113 x 150 x 10 cm and was painted with the medium oil on canvas. This artpiece is included in the digital collection of Belvedere, which is one of Europe's most famous museums with three locations that blends the experience of architecture and art in a unique way. This modern art public domain work of art is being provided - courtesy of © Belvedere, Vienna, inventory number: 1996. Creditline of the artwork: purchase from art dealer Gustav Nebehay, Vienna in 1918. Besides, the alignment is landscape and has a side ratio of 1.4 : 1, which implies that the length is 40% longer than the width. The painter Carl Blechen was a European artist from Germany, whose art style can mainly be assigned to Realism. The German artist was born in 1798 in cottbus and passed away at the age of 42 in the year 1840 in Berlin.
Product materials you can choose from
We offer a range of various materials and sizes for every product. In order match your personal requirements perfectly, you can choose among the following product customization options:
- Metal (aluminium dibond print): An Aluminium Dibond print is a print with a true depth effect, which creates a fashionable impression throuch a surface , which is non-reflective.
- Poster (canvas material): A poster print is a UV printed flat canvas paper with a nice surface texture. Please note, that depending on the absolute size of the poster print we add a white margin of around 2-6cm around the work of art, which facilitates the framing with your custom frame.
- Acrylic glass print: An acrylic glass print, often referenced as a plexiglass print, transforms the original work of art into wall décor. Your own replica of the work of art is being custom-made thanks to modern UV print machines. With a glossy acrylic glass fine art print contrasts and also color details will be more exposed thanks to the very subtle gradation of the picture. The plexiglass with real glass coating protects your chosen art replica against sunlight and heat for many more years to come.
- The canvas print: The canvas print is a printed canvas stretched on a wooden stretcher. It generates the plastic effect of three-dimensionality. The great advantage of canvas prints is that they are relatively low in weight, meaning that it is quite simple to hang your Canvas print without the help of additional wall-mounts. Therefore, a canvas print is suitable for any kind of wall.
Important information: We try our best in order to depict the products in as much detail as possible and to illustrate them visually. Although, the tone of the print materials, as well as the printing may differ marginally from the image on the monitor. Depending on your settings of your screen and the quality of the surface, color pigments may not be printed as exactly as the digital version on this website. Given that all are processed and printed by hand, there may also be minor discrepancies in the motif's size and exact position.
Structured item details
Article classification: | wall art |
Method of reproduction: | reproduction in digital format |
Manufacturing method: | UV direct print (digital printing) |
Product Origin: | produced in Germany |
Stock type: | on demand production |
Product usage: | home design, art reproduction gallery |
Artwork alignment: | landscape format |
Image aspect ratio: | 1.4 : 1 |
Meaning: | the length is 40% longer than the width |
Available options: | canvas print, acrylic glass print (with real glass coating), poster print (canvas paper), metal print (aluminium dibond) |
Canvas print (canvas on stretcher frame) sizes: | 70x50cm - 28x20", 140x100cm - 55x39" |
Acrylic glass print (with real glass coating) sizes: | 70x50cm - 28x20", 140x100cm - 55x39" |
Poster print (canvas paper) sizes: | 70x50cm - 28x20" |
Aluminium print size options: | 70x50cm - 28x20", 140x100cm - 55x39" |
Framing of the art reproduction: | without frame |
Artpiece background information
Painting name: | "Afternoon in Capri" |
Categorization of the work of art: | painting |
General category: | modern art |
Time: | 19th century |
Created in the year: | 1829 |
Artwork age: | more than 190 years |
Painted on: | oil on canvas |
Original dimensions (artwork): | 91 x 130 cm - frame: 113 x 150 x 10 cm |
Museum: | Belvedere |
Museum location: | Vienna, Austria |
Website of Museum: | www.belvedere.at |
License type of artwork: | public domain |
Courtesy of: | © Belvedere, Vienna, inventory number: 1996 |
Creditline of artwork: | purchase from art dealer Gustav Nebehay, Vienna in 1918 |
Artist overview table
Artist: | Carl Blechen |
Gender: | male |
Artist nationality: | German |
Professions: | painter |
Country of origin: | Germany |
Classification of the artist: | modern artist |
Styles: | Realism |
Age at death: | 42 years |
Born in the year: | 1798 |
Born in (place): | cottbus |
Year died: | 1840 |
Town of death: | Berlin |
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General specifications by Belvedere (© Copyright - by Belvedere - Belvedere)
We went to Capri to stay there for two days. but as we were the first day there was a very violent storm at sea that we could not go back; we had to stay there for eight days. Why he could experience the sea in such an intense blue This entry in Blechen's diary says. During this unintentionally long stay, the painter made several sketches, which he later heranzog for representing the sprawling bay on the north side of the island. In the middle of bushes almost hidden, you can see the fishing village of Marina Grande, at the end of the island rises above the Tiberiusfelsen Villa Jovis. Distance on the horizon takes shadowy offshoot of the Sorrento peninsula. Sheets refrained from using a meticulous drawing to describe the terrain or characterize trees and bushes, but he designed the view alone with the brush. Colorful shadows and pale colors illustrate an area in the scorching sunlight. A little later, the German painter was appointed professor of landscape painting at the Berlin Academy. The painting acquired the poetess Bettina von Arnim. [Sabine Grabner 8/2009]