Love and Light Deluxe Gold, Framed

Dan Baldwin

£2,250Or own this artwork from £225 a month with interest free finance. Select Own Art at checkout.

 

Love and Light Deluxe Gold, limited edition silkscreen with gold leaves print  by contemporary artist Dan Baldwin.

 

 

Edition of 30

 

 

Framed Size: 93cm (h) x 93cm (w)

 

This piece is framed and inclusive in the price.

Boxed, white smooth frame

 

*Available for click and collect only as part of the fair, please select collection date at checkout.

 

*If the exhibition piece is sold another one can be purchased for collection 24th January.

 

 

 

 

Shipping

UK unframed orders delivered within 7-10 days and framed within 21 days. International orders are despatched within 7-10 days. Please note, we only ship framed art within the UK.

Returns

If you’re not happy with your artwork, you can return it to us in original condition and packaging within 14 days for a refund. Please note, framed orders are custom-made and cannot be returned. Read our returns policy here.

Framing

Try ‘Our Pick’ for our curator’s framing recommendation. Our framing is handmade in London – learn more about framing here.

Interest Free Finance

Buy with Own Art and spread the cost over 10 months interest-free. To borrow from £100 to £2500 opt for PaybyFinance at checkout. Learn more here.

Dan Baldwin

Dan Baldwin creates a unique and immediately recognisable vision in his silkscreen prints. His work is at once both abstract and figurative, reflecting both reality and the world of imagination. Baldwin's subject matter is the interior of his own mind, from rumination on love, memory or philosophical issues, to an airing of opinion on politics and/or current affairs. The work is multi-layered, both physically and in terms of meaning. The motifs with which he plays often reoccur - skeletons, swallows, crucifixes, cartoon figures - and are often contradictory, creating an uncomfortable, sometimes sinister paradox. Symbolism is key to Baldwin's oeuvre - both his own interpretation and the personal response of each viewer.  These symbols of death, life and love reflect Baldwin's preoccupation with the 'big questions' of human existence.