Georges Lallemant (French, about 1580–1636) Lallemant left his native Lorraine for Paris around 1601. Throughout the first quarter of the 1600s he was one of the city's most prominent painters. In addition to providing designs for prints and tapestries, he painted numerous
altarpieces and other religious works. This drawing, which may represent one of the four Evangelists, demonstrates the artist's ability to fuse an expressive, earthy realism with elegance and monumentality. The bold use of black pen and white
heightening suggests that the drawing served as a model for a
chiaroscuro woodcut, an early type of color printing.
High Quality Wood Framed Print using museum quality paper and archival inks with a mat for a contemporary look. Comes with Acrylite glazing and hanging hardware. These are Made in USA or Europe depending upon your location.
Stretched Canvas is stretched over 1.25" thick pine bars and printed on heavy cotton poly matte finish canvas. Comes with mounting brackets. These are Made in USA or Europe depending upon your location.
Giclee Prints are printed on 250 gsm Matte Paper with the finest archival inks. Each print carries a white border around the perimeter. The listed size refers to the overall paper dimensions. The image is printed proportionally within this paper size and includes a small white border. These are Made in USA or Europe depending upon your location.
All of our images are digitized from the original or negative.
Questions? Please email service@archivea.com.
Artwork in this collection is from The J. Paul Getty Museum. Reproduction rights are reserved by the copyright owner and used under license by Archivea.