No. 6 in Gold – Fine Art For The Prisoner
This is a fine-art giclée.*
Artist Tamara Knight Parker pays homage to Charles Demuth's I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold. In her painting the large No. 6 is a tribute to Patrick McGoohan, creator, star and titular prisoner No. 6 of the British television series The Prisoner. No. 2 and the white orb, "Rover" all reference characters in the series, so popular that a Prisoner convention is held in Portmeirion Village in North Wales where much of the series was filmed, 46 years ago as of 2023.
This artwork fits in a standard 16” x 20” frame as shown or you can have it custom framed. The frame is NOT INCLUDED. Each print is signed by the artist.
Each piece of artwork is shipped flat and well-packaged. The artist includes a signed Certificate of Authenticity and Originality.
The watermark will not be printed on your fine art print.
This item ships for FREE inside the U.S.
*A giclée (pronounced "zhee-clay," from the French meaning "to spray") is a fine-art print reproduced by a camera or scanner with a high level of resolution. Most digital photos have a resolution of 72 DPI (dots-per-inch). For a giclée, that resolution must be 300 DPI. Why? Because the more dots of color that can be printed in a small area, the more detailed, the more dramatic the colors in the final image will be. A giclée is also printed by a large format inkjet on a specialty paper that qualifies it as "archival," (paper used for publications of high legal, historical or significant value.)
This is a fine-art giclée.*
Artist Tamara Knight Parker pays homage to Charles Demuth's I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold. In her painting the large No. 6 is a tribute to Patrick McGoohan, creator, star and titular prisoner No. 6 of the British television series The Prisoner. No. 2 and the white orb, "Rover" all reference characters in the series, so popular that a Prisoner convention is held in Portmeirion Village in North Wales where much of the series was filmed, 46 years ago as of 2023.
This artwork fits in a standard 16” x 20” frame as shown or you can have it custom framed. The frame is NOT INCLUDED. Each print is signed by the artist.
Each piece of artwork is shipped flat and well-packaged. The artist includes a signed Certificate of Authenticity and Originality.
The watermark will not be printed on your fine art print.
This item ships for FREE inside the U.S.
*A giclée (pronounced "zhee-clay," from the French meaning "to spray") is a fine-art print reproduced by a camera or scanner with a high level of resolution. Most digital photos have a resolution of 72 DPI (dots-per-inch). For a giclée, that resolution must be 300 DPI. Why? Because the more dots of color that can be printed in a small area, the more detailed, the more dramatic the colors in the final image will be. A giclée is also printed by a large format inkjet on a specialty paper that qualifies it as "archival," (paper used for publications of high legal, historical or significant value.)
This is a fine-art giclée.*
Artist Tamara Knight Parker pays homage to Charles Demuth's I Saw the Figure 5 in Gold. In her painting the large No. 6 is a tribute to Patrick McGoohan, creator, star and titular prisoner No. 6 of the British television series The Prisoner. No. 2 and the white orb, "Rover" all reference characters in the series, so popular that a Prisoner convention is held in Portmeirion Village in North Wales where much of the series was filmed, 46 years ago as of 2023.
This artwork fits in a standard 16” x 20” frame as shown or you can have it custom framed. The frame is NOT INCLUDED. Each print is signed by the artist.
Each piece of artwork is shipped flat and well-packaged. The artist includes a signed Certificate of Authenticity and Originality.
The watermark will not be printed on your fine art print.
This item ships for FREE inside the U.S.
*A giclée (pronounced "zhee-clay," from the French meaning "to spray") is a fine-art print reproduced by a camera or scanner with a high level of resolution. Most digital photos have a resolution of 72 DPI (dots-per-inch). For a giclée, that resolution must be 300 DPI. Why? Because the more dots of color that can be printed in a small area, the more detailed, the more dramatic the colors in the final image will be. A giclée is also printed by a large format inkjet on a specialty paper that qualifies it as "archival," (paper used for publications of high legal, historical or significant value.)