About Canvas Giclee Prints
A giclee, fine art print, is a digitally reproduced image of an original work photographed at a resolution of 300 dots per linear inch. The reproduction printing process involves applying archival, fade resistant pigmented inks, computer guided, into a museum quality canvas. The process creates a museum quality, highly detailed, precise image of the original. The canvas image surface then receives an application of an acrylic UV (ultra violet) protective varnish. The process creates an exact image of the original that will last a lifetime.
Each giclee print is accompanied by a Certificate of Authenticity, dated and bearing the original signature of the artist, George Sakkal. Each print(s) and its certificate will be mailed in a protective mailing tube and upon arrival be ready for stretching and framing. All prints are provided with a two (2) inch border to accommodate a stretcher frame.
Prints as well as the original work are bound and protected by copyright law. No work may be reproduced without the exclusive permission of the artist.
Click here to view the artist’s inventory and available giclee prints.
George Sakkal, a skilled artist, author, teacher, lecturer and research analyst, is the discoverer and father of CUVISM (Cognitive Unconscious Visual Creativity). Like Paul Cèzanne, father of Modern art, who suspected that the source of his human creativity was his unconscious mind, Sakkal proves Cèzanne’s suspicion to be true. In his recent book, WHOSE TRUTH– WHOSE CREATIVITY?, Why Postmodern Art Theory is a Cultural Damaging Hoax and How Neuroscience Can Prove This, A 21st CENTURY ART MANIFESTO, Sakkal not only proves Cezanne to be correct, he scientifically proves the past sixty years of Postmodernism, its art theory, reasoning and practices to have caused creative chaos, to be entirely false and significantly damaging to artists who subscribe to its use. He advocates that Postmodernism be replaced with the natural process of CUVISM, a methodology that discovers, not preconceives Fine Art as exemplified by, “Victory or Death”.