Local Storage seems to be disabled in your browser.
For the best experience on our site, be sure to turn on Local Storage in your browser.

Emerald Flow 2

In stock
SKU
WMET0297
Specialty: Hand Painted Artwork on Gallery Wrapped Raw Canvas
  • Raw Canvas
  • Non-Customizable
  • 36"w x 48"h
:
Image M1127
M1127
0.38″ x 2.13″
Maximum 250 characters
DP227414

 

This Met x Wendover Art Group design is a reproduction of an original work of art in The Metropolitan Museum of Art collection.

Dish with abstract design
Japan, Edo period (1615–1868)
Porcelain with overglaze polychrome enamels
(Hizen ware, Matsugatani type); second half of the 17th century
The Harry G. C. Packard Collection of Asian Art, Gift of Harry G. C. Packard, and Purchase, Fletcher, Rogers, Harris Brisbane Dick, and Louis V. Bell Funds, Joseph Pulitzer Bequest,
and The Annenberg Fund Inc. Gift, 1975   1975.268.546 

This fanciful 17th-century Japanese dish is housed in The Met’s Asian Art collection, which represents the artistic achievements of six major cultural traditions that encompass 5,000 years of history, half the world’s population, more than 20 modern nations, and a vast region that ranges from Afghanistan, the Indian subcontinent, and Southeast Asia across the Himalayas to China, Korea, and Japan. The Museum’s collection of Asian art—more than 35,000 objects, ranging in date from the third millennium BCE to the 21st century—is one of the largest and most comprehensive in the world.

DP227414

 

This Met x Wendover Art Group design is a reproduction of an original work of art in The Metropolitan Museum of Art collection.

Dish with abstract design
Japan, Edo period (1615–1868)
Porcelain with overglaze polychrome enamels
(Hizen ware, Matsugatani type); second half of the 17th century
The Harry G. C. Packard Collection of Asian Art, Gift of Harry G. C. Packard, and Purchase, Fletcher, Rogers, Harris Brisbane Dick, and Louis V. Bell Funds, Joseph Pulitzer Bequest,
and The Annenberg Fund Inc. Gift, 1975   1975.268.546 

This fanciful 17th-century Japanese dish is housed in The Met’s Asian Art collection, which represents the artistic achievements of six major cultural traditions that encompass 5,000 years of history, half the world’s population, more than 20 modern nations, and a vast region that ranges from Afghanistan, the Indian subcontinent, and Southeast Asia across the Himalayas to China, Korea, and Japan. The Museum’s collection of Asian art—more than 35,000 objects, ranging in date from the third millennium BCE to the 21st century—is one of the largest and most comprehensive in the world.