George Benjamin Luks, 1918 - Tsjechoslowaaks leger dat Vladivostok, Siberië, binnenkomt in 1918 - fine art print

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Belangrijke informatie: We try in order to describe the art products as accurately as possible and to display them visually. Still, some colors of the print materials and the print result can diverge to a certain extent from the image on the monitor. Depending on the settings of your screen and the condition of the surface, not all color pigments will be printed 100% realistically. Bearing in mind that all the art reproductions are processed and printed manually, there might also be slight discrepancies in the exact position and the size of the motif.

Original artwork specifications as provided from Los Angeles County Museum of Art website (© Copyright - door Los Angeles County Museum of Art - Los Angeles County Museum of Art)

Artists actively participated in the numerous efforts to raise money for the Allied cause during World War I. As part of the Fourth Liberty Loan Drive, New York’s Fifth Avenue was transformed into an art gallery during October 1918. Paintings devoted to the different Allied nations were displayed in shop windows. During this period Luks was inspired to paint a series of war-related compositions. The Czechoslovakian march through Siberia and the Czechoslovakian drive for independence during the war were causes célèbres that were repeatedly headlined in the newspapers. During the war Czech troops joined the Russians to fight on the side of the Allies. With the withdrawal of Russia from fighting after the signing of the Treaty of Brest-Litowsk in 1918, the Czechs were forced to leave Russia. They marched through Siberia and despite many impediments caused by poor weather and adverse political conditions reached Vladivostok in May 1918. There they boarded ships to journey to France, where they were to join other Allied forces. Luks depicted these soldiers arriving in Vladivostok. Luks no doubt became involved in the Czech cause through his friendship with the sculptor Gutzon Borglum (1871-1941), who had became closely involved in the Czech cause and even permitted his home in Stamford, Connecticut, to be used as a military base for the training of American-born Czech volunteers. Luks visited Borglum during this time and once joined him in painting posters to raise funds for the camp. Although Luks did not see the Czech army advancing in Siberia, he may have observed new soldiers practicing marching and attacking. He depicted the camp in Connecticut at least once, in Czechoslovakians in American Camp Celebrating Their Recognition as a Country, 1918 (unlocated; exhibited Allied War Salon, American Art Association Galleries, New York, 1918). Such an experience enabled Luks to become familiar with the Czech uniforms as depicted in Czech-slovak Chieftain, 1919 (Newark [N.J.] Museum), and also the new country’s flag. Although the red-andwhite striped flag Luks delineated in the museum’s painting is not the design eventually selected for the national flag, it is the one depicted by Henry Rittenberg (1879-1969) in his painting of the Czech army that was carried down Fifth Avenue during the celebrations in October 1918. This is the only major war scene Luks painted that he could not have witnessed firsthand. He based his painting on a photograph and description of the actual event told to him by a Lieutenant Frank Danielovsky. Danielovsky was one of the select dignitaries asked to participate in the Czechoslovak Day celebrations along Fifth Avenue on October 3, 1918. Luks inscribed in the lower-left corner of the painting that Danielovsky was his source, but at some unknown time the inscription was painted over. Although Luks could have painted Czechoslovakian Army Entering Vladivostok, Siberia, in 1918 as early as May, he may have painted it as late as October, after the Czech Day celebrations of the Fourth Liberty Loan Drive. It certainly was finished by the time of the Allied War Salon in December. In his usual bold brushwork Luks depicted the long column of Czech soldiers marching behind their leader on a cold winter day. The scene is simple, reduced to a central horizontal band of figures on a slight diagonal, with the background consisting of a few buildings. The composition of the scene relates to Luks’s other war paintings of marching figures, The Blue Devils on Fifth Avenue, 1917 (Phillips Collection, Washington, D.C.), and The Bersaglieri, 1918 (National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.). The overall impression is less agitated, however, due to the larger and broader areas of color.

Het aanbod van gedrukte producten

Dit 20e-eeuwse kunstwerk is gemaakt door de realist artist George Benjamin Luks in the year 1918. De 100 jarig kunstwerk is geschilderd met het formaat: 36 1/2 x 53 3/8 inch (92,6 x 135,5 cm) and was painted with oil on canvas. Besides, the artpiece is in the the Los Angeles County Museum of Art's digital art collection, which is located in Los Angeles, Californië, Verenigde Staten van Amerika. Met dank aan: Los Angeles County Museum of Art (www.lacma.org) (publiek domein licentie).Creditline van het kunstwerk: . Verder is de uitlijning van de digitale reproductie Landschap en heeft een zijverhouding van 3: 2, inhoudende dat de lengte is 50% langer dan de breedte. The comics artist, painter George Benjamin Luks was an artist, whose artistic style was mainly Realism. The painter was born in the year 1867 in Williamsport, Northampton county, Pennsylvania, United States and deceased at the age of 66 in 1933 in New York City, staat New York, Verenigde Staten.

Gestructureerde illustratiegegevens

Titel van het kunstwerk: "Czechoslovakian Army Entering Vladivostok, Siberia, in 1918"
Indeling: schilderij
Kunstclassificatie: moderne kunst
Kunstwerk eeuw: 20th eeuw
Jaar van creatie: 1918
Kunstwerk leeftijd: rond 100 jaar oud
Origineel medium: olieverf op canvas
Grootte van het originele kunstwerk: 36 1/2 x 53 3/8 inch (92,6 x 135,5 cm)
Museum / locatie: Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Locatie van het museum: Los Angeles, Californië, Verenigde Staten van Amerika
Beschikbaar onder: Los Angeles County Museum of Art
Licentie: publiek domein
Met dank aan: Kunstmuseum van Los Angeles County (www.lacma.org)

Het product

Product type: kunstdruk
Reproductiemethode: digitale reproductie
Productieproces: UV-direct printen
Productie: Duitse productie
Soort voorraad: productie op aanvraag
Voorgesteld productgebruik: kunstverzameling (reproducties), wanddecoratie
Uitlijning van illustraties: liggend formaat
Zijverhouding: lengte tot breedte 3 : 2
Betekenis van de beeldverhouding: de lengte is 50% langer dan de breedte
Beschikbare opties: print op acrylglas (met coating van echt glas), print op metaal (aluminium dibond), print op poster (canvaspapier), print op canvas
Canvas print (canvas op spieraam) opties: 30x20cm - 12x8", 60x40cm - 24x16"
Acrylglas print (met echte glascoating) formaten: 30x20cm - 12x8", 60x40cm - 24x16"
Formaatvarianten posterprint (canvaspapier): 60x40cm
Dibond print (alumnium materiaal) opties: 30x20cm - 12x8", 60x40cm - 24x16"
Kunstdruk inlijsten: niet inbegrepen

Overzichtstabel artiesten

Naam van de artiest: George Benjamin Luks
Andere artiestennamen: George Luks, Luks George Benjamin, Luks, Luks George, George Benjamin Luks
Geslacht van de artiest: mannetje
Nationaliteit artiest: Amerikaans
Beroepen: comics artist, painter
Land van de artiest: Verenigde Staten
Classificatie van de artiest: moderne kunstenaar
styles: Realisme
Levensduur: 66 jaar
Geboortejaar: 1867
Geboorteplaats: Williamsport, provincie Northampton, Pennsylvania, Verenigde Staten
Jaar van overlijden: 1933
Overleden in (plaats): New York City, staat New York, Verenigde Staten

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