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Nude With Calla Lilies Framed Canvas by Rivera
Considered the greatest Mexican painter of the twentieth century, Diego Rivera had a profound effect on the international art world.
Our canvas fine art replicas surpass most reproductions available in the market today. Each canvas is recreated in amazing detail so that even the subtlest brushstroke becomes vibrant. Artist-grade canvas is hand-stretched over wooden stretcher bars by skilled artisans and hand-coated with protectants to insure archival properties.
Nude with Calla Lillies by Diego Rivera
Sculpted frame with gentle engravings in a merlot finish with walnut accents
Frame includes a wooden liner with a subtle fillet
This Framed Canvas Art selection is being custom built for you. Please allow 5 business days for the product to leave our warehouse.
Create a contemporary look for your bedroom, living room, or den decor with the elegant Park Avenue Chrome One-light Mini Pendant.
Crafted of sturdy metal
Versatile chrome finish blends with any look
Completed by a white opal glass shade
Requires one 100-watt bulb
Measures 51 inches high x 6 inches in diameter
This fixture does need to be hard wired. Professional installation is recommended.
These early examples of silent cinema galvanized the general public into entering movie theatres for the first time. THE LIFE AND PASSION OF JESUS CHRIST was directed by Ferdinand Zecca and Lucien Nonguet, and has been carefully restored from the original 35mm prints. FROM THE MANGER TO THE CROSS was filmed in Palestine and Egypt, and chronologically depicts the story of Jesus Christ.DVD Features:Region 1Keep CaseFull Frame - 1.33Audio: Dolby Digital Stereo - English
This bestselling mystery is the third to feature Denver ex-cop and current antiquarian book dealer/part-time sleuth Cliff Janeway. Janeway has pulled off a real coup, purchasing at auction a magnificent first edition of a book by the explorer Sir Richard Burton. A radio broadcast about the book brings a nearly penniless elderly woman, Josephine Gallant, to Janeway's bookstore. Mrs. Gallant claims that the book previously belonged to her grandfather, Charles Warren, and that it was once part of an extensive collection of Burton works. Warren had promised the library to her, but when he died in 1906, her alcoholic father sold the books for a pittance to an unsavory family of bookdealers. Janeway promises Mrs. Gallant that he will attempt to trace the whereabouts of the library. As Janeway follows what he at first believes will be a very cold trail, he quickly discovers that there are still people who are prepared to kill rather than allow those books to be found.




