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paintingpainting floral

Painting showcasing a butterfly on a floral arrangement

START is now in its second year and adds to London’s burgeoning art fairs with several unique selling points.It aims particularly at emerging artists and new art scenes from around the world.There have been lines of people waiting to get in, both because of the quality of the art and the location at the Saatchi Gallery.While there must be a question on how many more fairs the British capital can take, all competing for collectors’ attention and casual browsers, this one is attracting the curious at least and is spread across all three floors of the gallery.START also featured curatorial projects to complement the art fair.Chim↑Pom, winners of the 2015 Prudential Eye Awards, presented its first solo exhibition in London. The Japanese collective makes work that is socially and politically engaged and has recently shown at P.S.1 in New York. A second Japanese collective, teamLab, which was shortlisted for the Prudential Eye Awards, presented an immersive installation that fused art and new technologies.The event, presented by Prudential featured galleries from cities as diverse as London, Seoul, Cape Town, Colombo, Hanoi, New York, Hong Kong, Budapest, Paris and Bogota to name a few.Among the talks and presentations, Erdmann Contemporary of Cape Town launched a new book, “120 Days of Sodom” by Manfred Zylla, available in a limited edition for prices of £50 each.


Flowers in a Glass Vase with Butterfly, 1686 Rachel Ruysch (1664-1750)

Flowers in a Glass Vase with Butterfly, 1686 | Rachel Ruysch | Painting Reproduction

View a video that showcases the step-by-step creation of Rachel Ruysch painting in our TOPofART studio. This video provides an in-depth look into the intricate process of creating a hand-painted oil reproduction of a classic masterpiece.

Oil Painting Reproduction

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€ 1943.00 EUR

Condition: Unframed

We frame canvas prints only, but not oil paintings.
There is a basic reason for not framing the oil paintings.
The hand-painted oil paintings are expensive product and the risk of damages during transport of stretched on a frame painting is too high.
You can imagine the risk of damaging and breaking the painting when it is stretched on a frame.
The second reason is the post expenses of the framed paintings and carrier limitations of the large shipments.
Sometimes postage costs go beyond the price of the painting itself.

*We ship our oil paintings rolled-up. You will be able to stretch and frame your canvas in your local frame-shop.

Condition: Unframed
SKU: RRY-17860
Painting Size:
57.4 x 46.0 cm – €1943

If you want a different size than the offered

Description

Completely Hand Painted
Painted by European Аrtists with Academic Education
Museum Quality
+ 4 cm (1.6″) Margins for Stretching
Creation Time: 8-9 Weeks

Shipping Options

Free WorldWide Standard Shipping (15-25 business days) .00 USD

DHL (3-4 business days)

The price for DHL shipping depends on the weight, the volume, and the destination of the parcel. After adding of the painting to the shopping cart, you can check the price of the shipping services.

Creation Process

We create our paintings with museum quality and covering the highest academic standards. Once we get your order, it will be entirely hand-painted with oil on canvas. All the materials we use are the highest level, being totally artist graded painting materials and linen canvas.

We will add 1.6″ (4 cm) additional blank canvas all over the painting for stretching.

High quality and detailing in every inch are time consuming. The reproduction of Rachel Ruysch also needs time to dry in order to be completely ready for shipping, as this is crucial to not be damaged during transportation.
Based on the size, level of detail and complexity we need 8-9 weeks to complete the process.

In case the delivery date needs to be extended in time, or we are overloaded with requests, there will be an email sent to you sharing the new timelines of production and delivery.

TOPofART wants to remind you to keep patient, in order to get you the highest quality, being our mission to fulfill your expectations.

We not stretch and frame our oil paintings due to several reasons:
Painting reproduction is a high quality expensive product, which we cannot risk to damage by sending it being stretched.
Also, there are postal restrictions, regarding the size of the shipment.
Additionally, due to the dimensions of the stretched canvas, the shipment price may exceed the price of the product itself.

You can stretch and frame your painting in your local frame-shop.

Delivery

Once the painting Flowers in a Glass Vase with Butterfly is ready and dry, it will be shipped to your delivery address. The canvas will be rolled-up in a secure postal tube.

We offer free shipping as well as paid express transportation services.

After adding your artwork to the shopping cart, you will be able to check the delivery price using the Estimate Shipping and Tax tool.

Museum Quality

Over 20 Years Experience
Only Museum Quality

The paintings we create are only of museum quality. Our academy graduated artists will never allow a compromise in the quality and detail of the ordered painting. TOPofART do not work, and will never allow ourselves to work with low quality studios from the Far East. We are based in Europe, and quality is our highest priority.




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The computer-generated exhibition is constantly changing and includes flowers that spring up, blossom, and wither away in real-time and in response to the movements of visitors to the galleryComputer-generated flowers and butterflies will cover the walls of a gallery as part of a huge digital art installation by a group of Japanese artists.The 500-strong collective, which includes programmers and scientists alongside artists, work under the name teamLab and are taking part in the START fair at the Saatchi Gallery near Sloane Square.Their work, called Flutter Of Butterflies Beyond Borders, is constantly changing and includes flowers that spring up, blossom, and wither away in real-time and in response to the movements of visitors to the gallery.The START project, which is in its second year at the gallery, brings together work from 47 venues in 25 cities including Tehran, Lagos and Seoul.Saatchi Gallery chief executive Nigel Hurst, who is a co-founder of the fair, said: “The Saatchi Gallery’s role is not only to bring contemporary art wherever it is being made to the widest possible audience, but also to help legitimise the making and collecting of art.“START provides a wonderful platform for new galleries and young artists from all over the world so we’re delighted to be hosting this exciting initiative in its second year.”The fair, which runs until Monday September 13, also includes work by another Japanese group, Chim Pom, including footage they shot after breaking in to a restricted area closed down by the government in the wake of the 2011 Fukushima disaster.

Featured on the creators project, Sep 9, 2015

Lose Yourself in an Interactive Garden of Digital Butterflies

Japanese art collective teamLab has a penchant for placing flowers within their installations, room-sized experiences that often pit immersive digital projections in architecturally-specific settings. For their latest, Flutter Of Butterflies Beyond Borders, teamLab takes over London’s Saatchi Gallery for the START Art Fair (which opens September 10), pairing virtual flowers with swarms of digital butterflies.As noted on teamLab’s website, the collective projects a glowing, psychedelic array of flowers and butterflies inside a mirrored walkway. To create Flutter Of Butterflies Beyond Borders, the collective digitally rendered a year’s worth of seasonal bloom and decay, all of it responsive to viewers’ activities within the mirrored hall.“Attendees’ presence will affect their cycle and whether they wither, die, spring up and blossom, [u]ltimately exploring the boundary between nature and human behaviour,” teamLab says. “The gallery space sees butterflies flying across its walls, onto the floral imagery that looks at art being released from its constraints by the digital domain.”A computer program built by teamLab creates the real-time interactivity. “[T]he visuals of the winged insects are not pre-recorded or played back, but continuously changing, never to be repeated,” teamLab explains.START Art Fair kicks off September 10th and runs to the 13th.

Featured on Sky, Sep 8, 2015

A Londra, una fiera per soli giovani artisti

Giunta alla seconda edizione, il prossimo giovedì 10 settembre verrà inaugurata START, la fiera d’arte organizzata da Parallel Contemporary Art e Saatchi Gallery negli spazi londinesi di quest’ultima. Tra le tante rassegne dedicate al collezionismo – ovvero all’incontro tra artisti, gallerie e mecenati – l’iniziativa di questa settimana ha una particolarità che l’ha resa presto popolare in tutto il mondo: in fiera è possibile trovare soltanto opere di autori emergenti, che hanno così la loro occasione di esporre in un ambito molto simile a quello museale, almeno per la qualità del progetto complessivo.Oltre alla fiera vera e propria con la sua nutrita selezione di gallerie ospitate, START ospiterà infatti anche quattro progetti artistici fatti e finiti. Il collettivo giapponese Chim↑Pom, tanto per cominciare, vedrà inaugurata la prima esposizione monografica a Londra, dopo aver già esposto in ambiti prestigiosi quali il MoMA PS1 di New York. All’arte socialmente impegnata del gruppo si affiancherà l’installazione di un altro collettivo giapponese, teamLab, che presenta a Londra una suggestiva fusione tra arte e nuove tecnologie.L’attenzione per la scena artistica asiatica si conferma con il terzo progetto, Prudential Singapore Eye, che promette di costituire un’imprescindibile panoramica per diventare presto conoscitori della migliore arte realizzata – appunto – a Singapore.Infine, il quarto progetto curatoriale – intitolato This is Tomorrow – riunirà ben dieci mostre monografiche dedicate ad altrettanti giovani artisti, accomunati dalla capacità di riflettere sui temi d’attualità e sul futuro di una società più che internazionale: altamente globalizzata, com’è quella contemporanea e presumibilmente sarà anche in futuro.[Immagine in apertura: teamLab, Flowers and People, Cannot be Controlled but Live Together – Dark, 2015, installazione digitale interattiva. Courtesy of teamLab and START Art Fair]

Featured on FINANCIAL TIMES, Sep 5, 2015

Colin Wynn
the authorColin Wynn

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