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Wayne Thiebaud: Confections Boxed Notecard Assortment
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Wayne Thiebaud: Confections Boxed Notecard Assortment

Wayne Thiebaud: Confections Boxed Notecard Assortment

$5.94

Original: $16.96

-65%
Wayne Thiebaud: Confections Boxed Notecard Assortment—

$16.96

$5.94

The Story

Instantly recognizable for their sensuous texture and warm, luminous palette, Wayne Thiebaud’s images of cakes, pies, and other ubiquitous store-bought foods brought him to international prominence in the 1960s. His food paintings explore society’s fascination with, and ritualistic treatment of, certain culinary items; Thiebaud paints what he has called the “tattletale signs” of our culture. Thiebaud’s formidable talents run to a wide range of other subjects, including figure studies, “aerial” landscapes, and eerily vertiginous cityscapes, but the images selected for reproduction in this notecard set concentrate on his skewed, good-humored, pensive take on the sweet stuff. Contains five each of the following notecards: Cake Window (Seven Cakes), 1970–1976 Candy Counter, 1969 Cakes and Pies, 1995 Suckers and Sweets, 2000
Wayne Thiebaud: Confections Boxed Notecard Assortment - Image 2

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Wayne Thiebaud: Confections Boxed Notecard Assortment - Image 3

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Wayne Thiebaud: Confections Boxed Notecard Assortment - Image 4

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Wayne Thiebaud: Confections Boxed Notecard Assortment - Image 5

Details & Craftsmanship

Every detail has been carefully considered to bring you the perfect product.

Description

Instantly recognizable for their sensuous texture and warm, luminous palette, Wayne Thiebaud’s images of cakes, pies, and other ubiquitous store-bought foods brought him to international prominence in the 1960s. His food paintings explore society’s fascination with, and ritualistic treatment of, certain culinary items; Thiebaud paints what he has called the “tattletale signs” of our culture. Thiebaud’s formidable talents run to a wide range of other subjects, including figure studies, “aerial” landscapes, and eerily vertiginous cityscapes, but the images selected for reproduction in this notecard set concentrate on his skewed, good-humored, pensive take on the sweet stuff. Contains five each of the following notecards: Cake Window (Seven Cakes), 1970–1976 Candy Counter, 1969 Cakes and Pies, 1995 Suckers and Sweets, 2000