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Dance at Le Moulin de la Galette (1876, Bal du Moulin de la Galette) by Pierre-Auguste Renoir is an everyday scene of real life, and one of his most celebrated masterpieces. It depicts a Sunday afternoon at the Moulin de la Galette at Montmartre in Paris, where working-class Parisians would dress up to dance, drink, and eat galettes into the evening. Jeanne Samary, who appears in many of Renoir's paintings, his brother Edmond, and friend Norbert Goeneutte, a painter, appear as dancers. All three are prominently featured in his painting The Swing.



- Regular price
- $130.00
- Sale price
- $130.00
- Regular price
-
$156.00
Artwork Details
- 1.5″ deep, solid wood stretcher bars.
- Scaled to the original artwork with no distortion and minimal to no cropping.
- All sizes given are in inches (″), assembled within a ¼″ tolerance.
- Solid wrap color on all four sides.
- Giclée printed with eco-solvent inks that resist fading for 100+ years.
- Satin/semigloss finish canvas is archival-grade, acid-free polycotton fabric.
- Stretched canvases are assembled within a ¼″ tolerance, ex. an 8x12″ canvas's final dimensions will be ~8x12″, on 1.5″ deep stretcher bars.
- Framed canvases are ~2″ larger, ex. an 8x12″ canvas's final framed dimensions will be ~10x14″ overall.
- Float frames are ⅝″ wide viewed from the front, and 1⅞″ deep; with a visible gap ("float") between the frame and canvas of ~¼″.
- Rolled canvases have a 2″ white margin to allow for custom stretching and framing, ex. an 8x12″ print's final dimensions will be 12x16″.

Ready to Hang Canvas
Canvas prints, or wrapped canvas, are hand-stretched over solid wood like the base of traditional painting. Canvases come with black backboard and hanging wire installed, ready to hang on your wall — without a frame.
Stretched canvas combines a classic medium with a modern finish, an ideal way to present artwork for display.


Canvas Float Frame
We offer modern frames intended to complement any art. Float frames feature a visible gap ("float") between the frame and canvas. No glass/glazing is used - canvases have a mildly reflective satin finish.