100 in stock
Ships within 2 business days
100 in stock
Ships within 2 business days
Getting posters and prints of art for your home is a simple and meaningful way to improve how your space feels and looks. Art is more than just decoration—it helps make your home feel warm, personal, and complete. Choosing artwork that matches your style and interests can make your home truly reflect who you are. Art can also lift your mood, making your space more enjoyable and relaxing.
Here’s why adding art to your home is a great idea:
– It adds personality and warmth, turning a house into a home.
– It expresses your unique style and taste.
– It reduces stress and increases happiness.
– It makes any room more colorful and inviting.
With the right artwork, you can create a space that’s not only beautiful but also feels like a true reflection of yourself.
Image of ‘Clara Bow Surfing’ from the cover of “Film Fun” magazine, August 1929, by Enoch Bolles. Enoch Bolles (1883–1976) was an influential American pin-up artist, best known for his dynamic, alluring covers for Film Fun magazine. Bolles began illustrating in the early 1900s, studying at the National Academy of Design, and initially created covers for humor magazines like Judge and Puck. However, it was his work for “Film Fun,” beginning in 1923, that cemented his legacy in American illustration. For two decades, Bolles served as the magazine’s exclusive cover artist, producing around 200 memorable illustrations until the magazine’s closure in 1943. His covers captured vivacious, often mischievous women, posed in imaginative costumes that defined early pin-up art and became iconic in their own right. While best known for these pin-up images, Bolles was also an accomplished advertising illustrator, producing popular work like the 1937 “Windy Girl” for Zippo lighters. Despite his success, Bolles’ career ended abruptly in 1943 due to psychological issues, leading to his confinement at Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital in New Jersey. Though he remained institutionalized for much of his later life, he continued painting privately until his death in 1976. Today, Bolles’ work endures as a lasting symbol of early 20th-century American glamour and illustration.
This artwork is available in the following sizes and types (measurements are in inches): 12×18 paper poster – 12×18 paper giclee – 12×18 canvas print – 12×18 canvas giclee – 16×24 paper giclee – 16×24 canvas print – 18×27 paper giclee – 20×30 paper poster – 20×30 paper giclee – 20×30 canvas print – 20×30 canvas giclee – 24×36 paper giclee – 24×36 canvas print – 24×36 canvas giclee
Sizes refer to the image itself. In addition there is a white border of approximately 2 inches on each side, which can be trimmed for framing or mounting.
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