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Agostino Brunius 'Free Women of Colour with Their Children and Servants in a Landscape', 1764-96, West Indian, Caribbean, Reproduction 200gsm A3 Vintage Classic Art Poster

Original price 6.99 - Original price 6.99
Original price
6.99
6.99 - 6.99
Current price 6.99

For some wonderful reproduction Caribbean and West Indian 18th century Agostino Brunias artworks look no further than World of Art. Faithfully reproduced and printed on quality 200gsm-thick four-star Green Star eco-friendly paper with a soft-satin low-sheen finish reducing the gloss effect allowing for a wider perspective of the image from different angles. Green star system approved paper is a universally recognised eco-responsibility paper based on the origin of the fibre and the manufacturing process. All our posters are standard A3 size and look beautiful with or without frames but if you're thinking of framing then a standard A3 frame will fit perfectly. All posters come with a thin white border.


Please note before ordering all our posters are reproduction posters


Standard A3 Size

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16.53" x 11.69"

42cm x 29.7cm

420mm x 297mm

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Agostino Brunias, 1730 to 1796, was a London-based Italian painter from Rome. Strongly associated with West Indian art, he left England at the height of his career to chronicle Dominica and the neighboring islands of the West Indies. Painted in the tradition of verite ethnographique, his art was as escapist as it was romantic. After Brunais met the Scottish architect Robert Adam, who was on a Grand Tour of Europe, he studied the magnificent ruins of Italy, as he called them, between 1756 and 1758. He became employed as a draughtsman by Adam, joining him in England in 1758, and painted many of Adam’s architecturally elegant buildings in England. Adam, praising his works, called Brunias a bred painter. His paintings of murals and paintings covered the interior walls of many English stately homes and exhibited at the Free Society of Artists in London. Although Brunias was initially commissioned to depict upper-class plantation life, his works assumed what was considered to be a subversive political role in the Caribbean, endorsing a free, anti-slavery society, and exposing the artificiality of racial hierarchies in the West Indies. He was particularly adept at painting Negro festivals, dances, markets, and other related cultural traditions and producing paintings showing interaction between the natives and the wealthy colonial settlers.

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