
ROB GONSALVES
SUN SETS SAIL
Limited Edition 195/200
Giclee on Canvas
22" x 44"
unframed, mint condition
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This exquisite print is in mint condition
and long sold out!
'SUN SETS SAIL' is
the most famous and most sought after prints ever created by
Rob Gonsalves. It is almost impossible to find one of these
on the market. This is the first one we have had available in
years!
The Sun Sets Sail image is the cover
for the well know museum book, Masters of Deception: Escher,
Dali & the Artists of Optical Illusion by Al Seckel and
Douglas R. Hofstadter
The detail in this piece is extraordinary.
The digital images above do not do this
piece justice.
The colors are so much more vibrant and alive!
We do supply you with the Certificate
of Authenticity and Certificate of Appraisal for the full value
of the piece.
Paragon Fine Art gallery
is an official distributor of Gonsalves' works, registered with
Gonsalves' publishing.
| BIO
Rob Gonsalves' work is
an attempt to represent human beings desire to believe
in the impossible.
Rob Gonsalves developed
an interest in drawing from imagination using various
media. By age twelve, his awareness of architecture grew
as he leaned perspective techniques and began to do his
first paintings and renderings of imagined buildings.
After an introduction to Artists Dali and Tanguy, Gonsalves
began his first surrealist paintings. The "Magic
Realism" approach of Magritte along with the precise
perspective illusions of Escher came to be influences
in his future work. In his post college years, Gonsalves
worked full time as an architect, also painting trompe
l'oeil murals and theatre sets. After an enthusiastic
response in 1990 at the Toronto Outdoor Art Exhibition,
Gonsalves devoted himself to painting full time.
Although Gonsalves' work
is often categorized as surrealistic, it differs due to
the fact that the images are deliberately planned and
result from conscious thought. Ideas are largely generated
by the external world and involve recognizable human activities,
using carefully planned illusionist devices. Gonsalves
injects a sense of magic into realistic scenes. As a result,
the term "Magic Realism" describes his work
accurately. |