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Splash Me a Double
Splash Me a Double    

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Size: 13.50" x 16.50"
Regular: $119.96 Only: $59.98

This fine framed artwork has a faux canvas treatment, recreating the original canvas look. It is finished in an ultra modern 1.0" wide by 1.0" silver stainless steel colored frame.
The size dimensions for each picture are the OUTSIDE DIMENSIONS. (The frame is included). 

CUSTOMERS WHO VIEWED THIS ITEM ALSO VIEWED:

CUSTOMER REVIEWS

Just got the pictures that I ordered and they look incredible! Better than I thought they would to be honest, the frames are beautiful and solid, much more refined than I had thought they may be. I can't get over the quality of the picture either, the matting is just stunningly done. I will definitely be coming back to look for some other pieces. Thanks again!!

- Trevor, West Virginia

DESIGNER TIPS AND DECORATING IDEAS

If we had a dollar for every time we heard this question, we could feed a small country! The answer is easy: Option a) one single very large piece. b) 3 matching squares or c) 2 large rectangular matching pieces with one piece cut in half and placed on either side of the rectangle. See our Framed Art Sets to get an idea of this (and this option is my personal favorite!).

ABOUT THE ARTIST

Niagara (born August 23, 1956)
Niagara materialized on the scene in the late 70's as front person for the noise band DESTROY ALL MONSTERS. (D.A.M)
While D.A.M was performing on stage at the Second Chance in Ann Arbor, Madonna was waiting on tables. Indeed, Debbie Harry, Patti Smith and Chrissie Hynde borrowed from the Niagara punk prototype. Her presence was described in Rolling Stone as "a cocktail of Valium, Tuinal and Nervine" and Spin wrote her "laissez-faire delivery carries much more punch than a conventional singer." Niagara has said that she started performing so that "people would leave me alone". Her early cover art, done in pen & ink and gouache appear to be self portraits. Her fierce female depictions of femme fatales plumb the depths of trash culture. "It's the men who cry in my paintings," Niagara muses. She later showed "Warholistic" use of colour on her large canvases and actually met Andy Warhol in the late 70's.
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