About this finishing
Print. The image is printed on the top quality 10-ink HP Z9PS printer on HP matte 270 g / m2 paper. You can choose any size to an accuracy of 1 cm. A margin of 5 cm around the image is added to the size of the motif.


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A View of Boxhill, Surrey, with Dorking in the Distance
Date:
1733Medium:
oil on canvasLocation:
Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection, USADimensions:
90.4 x 136.1 Lambert painted picture A View of Boxhill, Surrey, with Dorking in the Distance in 1733. Prevailing color of this fine art print is green and its shape is landscape. Original size is 90.4 x 136.1. This art piece is located in Yale Center for British Art, Paul Mellon Collection, USA. This image is printed on demand - you can choose material, size and finishing.
George Washington Thomas Lambert (1873-1930) was a
realistic painter and son of an American railroad engineer. Born in St. Petersburg, his parents emigrated to Australia. He worked as a clerk in a transport company. However, he gravitated towards a rural way of life (
Landscape with Farmers) and he found a fondness for horses that he captured in his hauntingly, colourfully soothing paintings, for example
Settler’s Daughter. When his paintings began to earn money, he returned with his wife to England, but shortly thereafter moved back to Paris as London seemed to him too conservative. In Paris, he drew inspiration and techniques of old masters such as
Anthony Van Dyck an
Peter Paul Rubens < / a>. Before the outbreak of World War I, he devoted himself to portraits of friends and family. His most important portrait was the equestrian portrait of Edward III. He returned to Australia in 1921 and exhibited and worked there until his death in the 1930s.