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on the images below to see enlargements and details. 1 · 2 1 · 2 A giclée is a technique developed in the last few years that transfers - via a color computer readout - the original photographed image of a large acrylic painting on canvas to a smaller quite vibrant u.v. protected, archival reproduction on handmade paper. Giclées have a much richer texture than prints or posters. They are, in fact, computer-generated paintings, derived from acrylic images, but with an inkjet radiance all their own. Dan Morse, who was the photographer at Gerald Peters Gallery for many years, has refined the technique, and applied it from beginning to end. With these works on paper, we are able to manipulate the colors of the original so as to create inexpensive works of painterly quality that are affordable, easy to mail rolled up in a hard cardboard tube, and as beautiful, sometimes more so (it seems to me) than the original work when framed. They are all limited editiions of 100, insured when shipped, signed and titled by me. --Pierre Delattre
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