Fine Art Poster
Iconic artworks with vivid colors using giclée fine art 12-color printing technology. Unmatched quality and durability using 200gsm smooth matte paper. Unframed; delivered flat or rolled.

Roger Fry
A 1917 portrait of the artist Nina Hamnett by Roger Fry, capturing the subject with the structural focus and muted palette characteristic of his Post-Impressionist style.
Roger Fry, a central figure in the Bloomsbury Group and a critic who introduced Post-Impressionism to British audiences, painted this portrait of the artist Nina Hamnett in 1917. Hamnett was a notable figure in the bohemian circles of London and Paris, often referred to as the Queen of Bohemia. Fry captures her with a direct, unidealised gaze, reflecting his interest in the structural qualities of form rather than mere photographic likeness. The composition is grounded in the modernist principles Fry championed. Hamnett is seated in a chair, her posture relaxed yet alert. She wears a dark, high-necked garment that contrasts with the muted, earthy tones of the background. Fry employs a controlled palette, using ochre, deep greens, and soft pinks to define the space. The background includes a table with simple domestic objects, which are rendered with a flattened perspective typical of his approach to pictorial space. The brushwork is deliberate, focusing on the weight and volume of the figure. This portrait provides a glimpse into the social and artistic milieu of the period. Hamnett, who was also a painter and a muse to many, is presented here with a sense of psychological presence. Fry avoids excessive detail, choosing instead to focus on the essential geometry of the sitter and her environment. The work is a clear example of his application of Post-Impressionist theory to portraiture, where the arrangement of colour and shape takes precedence over traditional academic finish. It remains a significant record of the relationship between two figures who occupied the centre of early twentieth-century British art.

Solid wood frames, UV-protected acrylic glaze, and archival backing for lasting durability.
12-colour giclée printing on FSC-certified 200gsm fine art paper, with lifetime fade resistance.
Designed in Britain and printed to order at your nearest hub, reducing waste and shipping distance.
Each frame is sealed with rigid backing and fixings attached, no extra effort required.
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a Cambridge scientist turned art critic who coined Post-Impressionism, infuriated Sargent, and brought Cezanne to London in 1910
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