Pieter Bruegel the Elder: Fall of the Rebel Angels - Hardcover
Pieter Bruegel the Elder: Fall of the Rebel Angels - Hardcover
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Key Features:
Key Features:
- Premium Quality: Crafted from durable 3mm (.14in) composite wood board for lasting enjoyment.
- Vibrant Imagery: High-resolution UV printing directly on the wood—no paper laminate—for stunning detail and vibrant colors.
- Eco-Conscious: Made with environmentally friendly materials.
- Heirloom Keepsake: Your puzzle arrives beautifully packaged in a handcrafted wooden box, perfect for gifting or storing your masterpiece.
Craftsmanship and Care:
Craftsmanship and Care:
Experience the satisfying click of perfectly interlocking pieces. Our state-of-the-art laser cutting ensures precise fit and a smooth, seamless puzzle-solving experience. The perfect upgrade from cardboard without breaking the bank.
- Natural Laser Residue: A small amount of harmless black residue from the laser cutting process may be present. Simply wipe it away with a damp cloth.
- Hand-Finished Details: Each puzzle board, each wooden box are all carefully hand-stained, painted, and glued.
Satisfaction Guaranteed:
Satisfaction Guaranteed:
We are confident in the quality of our puzzles. If you are not completely satisfied, we offer a full refund or exchange.
PLEASE NOTE:
Each puzzle is crafted to make the most of your chosen size. Artwork may be subtly adjusted to meet our material and production standards while honoring the original work. Planning to frame yours? Email info@whatawoodwork.com for final measurements.
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PRODUCT DESCRIPTION
by Pieter Brueghel (Artist), Tine Meganck (Text by (Art/Photo Books)), Michel Draguet (Preface by)
Pieter Bruegel the Elder: Fall of the Rebel Angels is the first comprehensive book on one of the most cherished Renaissance masterpieces in the collection of the Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium. Bruegel's dizzingly complex "Fall of the Rebel Angels" (1562) is presented in this lavishly illustrated volume in microscopic detail, and placed in its wider context in the texts, which argue that, with this painting, Bruegel turned a traditional devotional theme into an innovative commentary on his own time. Many of the angels in Bruegel's scene are hybrids of natural and artificial forms, just as the curiosity cabinets of the time would juxtapose "naturalia" and "artificialia" for the connoisseur, connecting the painting to early modern European cultures of knowledge and collecting.
