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Edouard Manet Face Mask featuring the digital art Luncheon On The Grass #1 by Edouard Manet

Boundary: Bleed area may not be visible.

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Luncheon On The Grass #1 Face Mask

Edouard Manet

by Edouard Manet

$17.99

This product is currently out of stock.

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Product Details

The Center for Disease Control has recommended the use of cloth face masks to help fight the spread of COVID-19.

This face mask is made from 100% polyester and includes two woven, elastic loops for a comfortable, one-size-fits-all fit.

Please note - this is NOT a surgical grade mask. It is not intended for any medical or commercial uses, whatsoever. It is a simple, cloth mask designed for everyday use to cover your mouth when out in public. The mask should not be used in any medical or surgical setting.

We make no warranties that the mask prevents infections or the transmission of viruses or diseases.

Design Details

In 1863 French Impressionist painter Edouard Manet shocked the art world with his painting Luncheon on the Grass.... more

Ships Within

5 - 10 Business Days

Additional Products

Luncheon On The Grass #1 Digital Art by Edouard Manet

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Luncheon On The Grass #1 Canvas Print

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Luncheon On The Grass #1 Framed Print

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Luncheon On The Grass #1 Art Print

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Luncheon On The Grass #1 Poster

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Luncheon On The Grass #1 Metal Print

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Luncheon On The Grass #1 Acrylic Print

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Luncheon On The Grass #1 Wood Print

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Luncheon On The Grass #1 Jigsaw Puzzle

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Luncheon On The Grass #1 Ornament

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Face Mask Tags

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Digital Art Tags

digital art edouard manet digital art vintage digital art nude digital art olympia digital art courtesan digital art bouquet of flowers digital art prostitute digital art whore digital art working girl digital art lady of the evening digital art lady of the night digital art old masters digital art historic digital art sensuous digital art figurative digital art

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Artist's Description

In 1863 French Impressionist painter Edouard Manet shocked the art world with his painting Luncheon on the Grass.

The outrage at Manet's painting stems from the still-current tradition of hypocrisy. Despite the fact that it was quite obvious that real life nude models were the inspiration for all those mythological creatures and Greek and Roman goddesses cavorting around naked in so many paintings, it was acceptable because they weren't really naked women. Manet's real crime, therefore, wasn't in presenting all the naughty bits that had, after all, been on display in paintings for centuries, but rather that he was contributing to a blurring of the distinction between the real and the artifice. The fantasy nude women in paintings was, with just a few thousand brush strokes by one man, replaced by the ordinary. Oddly, a fully nude Greek goddess complete with exposed breasts and hairless pubes was preferable to the side view of one breast and no genitalia on the woman in Manet's...

 

$17.99