The Lighthouse at Two Lights is an oil on canvas painted in 1929 by the American painter Edward Hopper and kept in New York at The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Lighthouse at Two Lights depicts a lighthouse built on a hill, whose steep slope and a point of very low view, hides the view of the sea. The lighthouse, together with the rest of the architectural structure, is made plastic thanks to the strong midday light that creates areas of light opposed to sharp shadows. The pasty colors of the oil are returned in all their brilliance in the Giclée canvas prints produced by Shopart. The print on canvas of the lighthouse painted in the framework Light at Two Lights is in high resolution and is printed with the fine art giclée technique that makes use of as many as eight pure pigment colors. In addition, Hopper's paintings are available in poster format and print on mdf board. To make the artistic reproduction similar to the original work, just add the varnish paint brush effect specially designed by the technicians in Shopart. This paint, non-toxic and transparent, does not alter the colors but adds a similar effect to the artworks painted in oil on canvas with raised brushstrokes visible to both eye and touch
A.Cilia
Artist | Edward Hopper |
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Title | The Lighthouse at Two Lights |
Original size | cm 74,9 x 109,9 |
Main color | Red |
Layout | Landscape |
Size | 20 x 30, 30 x 45, 40 x 60, 50 x 75, 60 x 90, 70 x 105, 80 x 120, 90 x 135, 100 x 150 |