Gilded Painting Presents: Masterpieces with a Touch of Gold
- Published
- in Shopping
Add a touch of luxury to your home with these handcrafted gold gilded painting presents. They’re made in a third-generation workshop in Verona, Italy, and no two are alike.
White kitchens can feel sterile without the right design element. A floral basket mosaic tile Tranh thu phap backsplash brings visual interest to a neutral space.
Golden Mosaic Tile Art Installation
Embrace the golden tones of space with this luminous handmade spherical mosaic piece. Extensively studded with gold mosaic tiles, this marvelous sphere resembles the surface of a planet made of pure light. The eccentric chromatic style is perfect for a bathroom, as it will reflect ambient lighting and create a feeling of otherworldliness.
A modern interpretation of Art Deco, the Kasol Golden Marble and Mirrored Glass Mosaic features a neutral field of natural marble tesserae topped with accents of back-beveled glass and mirrored gold edges. Whether installed as an accent wall or kitchen backsplash, this geometric pattern will elevate your space with its allure of luxury and opulence.
Gilded Landscape Oil on Canvas Gifts
Oil on canvas paintings are a classic choice for those looking to make a statement with their wall art. Unlike a poster, a genuine handcrafted painting can bring life to any room with its breathtaking color and detail. Choose from landscapes of wooded wonderlands or scenic vistas, or opt for a more abstract painting like a Vincent van Goh or Paul Cezanne masterpiece. These artworks come in a variety of styles, from traditional impressionist frames to contemporary “floater” frames. Look for a frame that is uniquely designed to stand out and showcase the paint strokes of your new oil painting.
Gold Plated Abstract Expressionism Pieces
One of the world’s most expensive paintings is Jackson Pollock’s 1948 abstract painting Number 17A. It was sold in 2006 for $105.7 million to a private collector. Pollock intentionally gave his modern art pieces numbers instead of descriptive titles to allow them to stand on their own.
The Benton’s new acquisitions and bilingual treatment of the exhibition gild, carve, and emboss demonstrate how these crosscurrents shaped the development of modern art, as artists synthesized Indigenous culture and European representational systems to create distinctive iconography that elevated religious subjects into a broad visual vocabulary. The exhibition explores how artists incorporated gold leaf and other decorative elements to punctuate these narratives.