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Museum-quality giclée or canvas print with fast production and flexible finish options.
Pick from our preset sizes that match the artwork's original proportions.
You may enter your own dimensions to fit a specific frame or space. If your selected size does not match the original image's proportions, we will either crop the artwork or extend the image with a mirrored or solid-fill edge. A digital mockup will be sent for your approval before production begins.
Please note that the on-screen preview does not reflect the actual cropping or extension. Only the mockup will accurately show the final composition.
While custom sizes are available, we recommend selecting a dimension from the predefined list to preserve the original proportions.
Worldwide Delivery () in 2 weeks instead of standard 4/5 weeks. (22 July)
Mirror
Reproduction Size
Spanish visual artist Inmaculada Salinas emerged from Guadalcanal, Seville in 1967, bringing a distinctive approach to contemporary art that blends meticulous drawing techniques with the powerful concept of appropriation. Her artistic practice isn’t merely about representation; it's about actively engaging with existing imagery and texts—a process she describes as ‘telling common stories,’ focusing on figures often unnamed who inhabit spaces populated by borrowed photographs and printed matter.
A key element of Salinas’s oeuvre is appropriationism. She deliberately incorporates images sourced from diverse collections – photographs, engravings, paintings—transforming them into integral components of her compositions. This practice isn't simply pasting images onto surfaces; it involves a careful consideration of their context and layering them with intricate drawings that amplify their narrative potential.
Her artistic vision centers on reclaiming the feminine voice within art history, emphasizing small-scale formats and fragmented narratives. Salinas’s exploration of archival materials—particularly photographs—challenges viewers to reconsider how images shape our understanding of history and culture. Recognized as an ‘image gatherer,’ she skillfully weaves together disparate elements into cohesive artworks that resonate with a profound sensitivity to both visual language and cultural memory.
Ultimately, Inmaculada Salinas's contribution to contemporary art lies in her ability to articulate complex ideas through deceptively simple visual forms—drawing and appropriation—creating artworks that invite contemplation and provoke dialogue about identity, history, and the role of imagery in shaping our perceptions.
1967 - , Spain
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