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Boundary: Bleed area may not be visible.
by Otto Rapp
$43.00
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Product Details
Our weekender tote bags are chic and perfect for a day out on the town, a staycation, or a weekend getaway. The tote is crafted with soft, spun poly-poplin fabric and features double-stitched seams for added durability. The 1" thick cotton handles are perfect for carrying the bag by hand or over your shoulder. This is a must-have for the summer.
Design Details
India Ink (Micron Pen) Drawing on buff Arches etching paper, 2008... more
Care Instructions
Spot clean or dry clean only.
Ships Within
2 - 3 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...
$43.00
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?