Fine Art
Giclee Prints Museum Reproductions
LookClickPrint specializes
in reproductions of Museum Art. We partner with
Museums from around the world. These Museums provide us with special
access to their artwork. Some images are famous and are from
well-known artists. Some
are brought out from the archives specifically to be viewed through LookClickPrint
and are rarely seen otherwise. Our Museum Reproductions are approved
by the Museum. They review our product for color and likeness to
the original image. Our Museum partners such as The British Museum,
Harvard University Art Museums, The Denver Art Museum, Norman Rockwell
Estate, The Monterey Museum of Art, The Desert Botanical Museum, Orlando
Art Museum, The British Library and many more give us exclusive authority
to produce these Museum Reproductions.
We have amassed a collection of
images that, if it stood by itself, would rival some of the finest Museums
in the world. Classic Masters, Contemporary Artists, Impressionist
images, Antique Maps, Audubon Bird Prints, Botanical Prints, American
Heritage images by Rockwell, Hudson River School works by Chuck
Connelly, Church, Cole Elias Rivera Bierstadt,
Southwest prints and Japanese wood blocks all grace the “digital
archives” of
LookClickPrint. European Artists such as Degas, Monet, Pisarro,
Rembrandt, Da Vinci, Renoir, Gauguin, Durer, Canelleto, Turner, Michelangelo,
and Raphael; American
greats such as Hopper, Kloss, Rockwell, Remington, Homer, Thorton Dial,
Catlin, Whistler and Audubon; Japanese Artists such as Hokusai, Choki,
Hiroshige, Kaisan and Koson are all in our collection. These works
are originally produced as Oils, Acrylics, Pen and Ink sketches, Woodblocks
or Woodcuts, Pastel, Watercolors, Etchings or Lithographs.
LookClickPrint’s Museum Reproductions are archival, meaning that they
are made from special papers, canvas and ink that allow them to last for many,
many years. The Giclée process that we work with provides
a very wide variety of colors. The variety is virtually infinite, thereby
allowing us to produce the subtle differences that capture the beauty of a
watercolor or a pastel and allowing us to be able to satisfy the curatorial
staff of our partner Museums.
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