"Dear Georgia-Letter 2" by Gail Tarantino
5 out of 5 Customer Rating
Item No.
100296920
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"Dear Georgia-Letter 2" by Gail Tarantino
5 out of 5 Customer Rating
Item No.
100296920
Black
Maple
White
Available to ship in:
- An exclusive piece created in partnership with the New York gallery Uprise Art.
- This limited edition archival print is custom framed with acrylic Plexiglas and maple wood.
- Printed on acid-free 100% cotton rag paper that has a smooth, matte finish.
- 41½" H 30¼" W 2½" D
Shipping Options
- Ships via FedEx
Return Options
Not satisfied with your purchase? You have 30 days to return your order. Learn more.
1-Year Warranty
Terms and conditions apply. Learn more
Terms and conditions apply. Learn more
Created by Gail Tarantino for Uprise Art
Manufacturer SKU:
Details
For this piece, San Francisco Bay-area artist Gail Tarantino has created an original artwork, using pigmented acrylic ink that has been printed as a high-quality limited edition archival print on acid-free paper, made of 100% cotton rag. Created in collaboration with Uprise Art, this limited-edition archival artwork print is custom-framed and exclusive to Design Within Reach. It is archivally framed with acrylic Plexiglas and a matte wood frame. Limited edition of 50.
- An exclusive piece created in partnership with the New York gallery Uprise Art.
- This limited-edition archival print is custom framed with acrylic Plexiglas and maple wood.
- Printed on acid-free 100% cotton rag paper that has a smooth, matte finish.
- Hanging hardware and instructions included.
- Brand
- Uprise Art
- General Dimensions
-
- 41½" H 30¼" W 2½" D
- Product Weight
- 20 lbs
- Assembly
- Comes fully assembled
- Warranty
-
1-Year Warranty
Terms and conditions apply. Learn more
"Dear Georgia-Letter 2" by Gail Tarantino
- Height (in): 41½
- Width (in): 30¼
- Depth (in): 2½
- Weight (lbs): 20
- Maple frame
- Acrylic Plexiglas
- 100% cotton rag paper
Gail Tarantino
Gail Tarantino’s artwork is often informed by a “not-so-secret desire to be literary.” The San Francisco-based painter begins many of her pieces by writing short stories, letters, or notes. As a way of interpreting language and its myriad meanings, Tarantino then encodes the text using highly pigmented acrylic ink, which results in abstract color compositions rife with hidden meaning.
More on Gail Tarantino