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Boundary: Bleed area may not be visible.
by Otto Rapp
$35.00
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Product Details
Decorate your bathroom and dry yourself off with our luxuriously soft bath towels and hand towels. Our towels are made from brushed microfiber with a 100% cotton back for extra absorption. The top of the towel has the image printed on it, and the back is white cotton. Available in three different sizes: hand towel, bath towel, and bath sheet.
Design Details
India Ink (Micron Pen) Drawing on buff Arches etching paper, 2008... more
Care Instructions
Machine wash cold and tumble dry with low heat.
Ships Within
1 - 2 business days
India Ink (Micron Pen) Drawing on buff Arches etching paper, 2008
Please note the original size of the artwork when ordering prints! It is a small drawing, aprox. 9.5 x 12.375 inches. Since it was scanned with very high resolution, it yields larger prints (up to 40 inches) with great clarity and detail, which might be attractive for a large wall setting.
I completed this just now, while working on the co-operative project of Ben Tolman's Antipodes - since working on the project, I started using the Micron pens.
THE MYSTIC OTTO RAPP Born in 1944 in Felixdorf, Lower Austria, I lived and was educated in Vienna, where later I worked as a clerk in the Transport and Insurance Business. After completing service in the Austrian Air Force, I traveled throughout Europe, eventually settling in Stockholm, Sweden. As a Painter I was initially self taught, studying in the various Galleries and Museums. In Vienna, I was often hanging out at the Akademie der Bildenden Kuenste, where I admired the work of the Wiener Schule des Phantastischen Realismus represented there by the Professors Ernst Fuchs, Rudolf Hausner and Arik Brauer. In Stockholm, I found out that I was washing dishes in the very same Restaurant where years earlier another Viennese...
$35.00
Dan Twyman
Nice
Otto Rapp
Time is of no concern when what you are doing is a trip! When I set out to work on something, I never know where it will lead, since I have no pre-conceived idea what I will be doing when I start, only some vague concept, and then, that's not written in stone, and I usually depart from it in short order. That way, ideas that form in my head, beforehand as well as when I am working, are altered as I go and then the original ideas can again be the touchstone for something new again ......
Elliott Shoemaker
dude this is freaking retardedly good. you just inspired me to spend a good 5 hours on a drawing, but keep it up no doubt, and i was wondering how long it took to freking draw that?