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.

Marcel Duchamp
A 1911 Cubist portrait by Marcel Duchamp, depicting his sisters through fragmented forms and a muted, earthy colour palette.
Painted in 1911, Yvonne and Magdeleine Torn in Tatters represents a specific period in the career of Marcel Duchamp, during which he engaged with the formal experiments of Cubism. The work depicts his two sisters, Yvonne and Magdeleine, rendered through a fragmented lens that prioritises geometric abstraction over traditional representation. Duchamp employs a palette of earthy tones, ochres, and muted blues to construct the figures, allowing their forms to merge with the surrounding space. The composition is notable for its rejection of conventional perspective. Instead of a singular viewpoint, the artist presents multiple angles simultaneously, a technique that reflects the influence of contemporary avant-garde movements in Paris. The faces are stylised, with simplified features and heavy outlines that suggest a sculptural quality. The title itself, with its reference to being torn in tatters, hints at the deconstructive approach applied to the subjects, suggesting a psychological or physical fragmentation that moves beyond mere portraiture. This piece occupies a space between the artist's early post-impressionist efforts and his later, more radical conceptual works. It demonstrates his ability to manipulate form and light to create a sense of ambiguity. The figures are not static; they appear to shift and dissolve, inviting the viewer to piece together the visual information provided on the canvas. By focusing on the interplay of shadow and light, Duchamp creates a rhythm that guides the eye across the surface, rather than into a deep, illusory space. The work remains a clear example of the artist's early technical proficiency and his willingness to dismantle the traditional boundaries of the portrait genre, favouring a structural analysis of the human form that would eventually lead him toward his later, more provocative artistic inquiries.

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.
Real reviews from real customers
Put a urinal in a gallery, retired from art to play chess, and spent twenty years secretly building an installation nobody knew about.
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