Indian Struggling with a Gorilla ☳ Rousseau ☵ Canvas
Tropical Landscape: American Indian Struggling with a Gorilla (1910) by Henri Rousseau is emblematic of his characteristically inaccurate depictions and mixing of exotic peoples, animals and plant life. It depicts an American Indian fighting a gorilla in a lush, tropical jungle setting, presenting his sincere fascination and curiosity for non-European cultures, which he perceived as poetic. The fight between man and beast, against a background of uncultivated nature, reflects a conception of distant tropical places as wild and uncivilized.
- Regular price
- $120.00
- Sale price
- $120.00
- Regular price
-
Stretched canvas prints, also know as wrapped canvas, are created from a giclée print on canvas (instead of paper), and like a traditional painting, the canvas is hand-stretched over a solid wood frame. It can be mounted in a float frame, or displayed on its own. The sides of the canvas are finished in a solid color that complements the artwork, creating a modern reproduction ready to hang on your wall, without a frame.
Giclée printed with eco-solvent inks to resist fading for over 100 years
Canvases are archival-grade, acid-free, satin-finish polycotton fabric
Frames and stretcher bars are solid wood with black backboard and hanging wire installed
All sizes given are in inches (″)
Sizes offered are to scale with the original work of art
Every effort has been made to scale this artwork without distortion or cropping
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″