Holiday Homecoming cards
Holiday Homecoming cards
Regular price
$22.00 USD
Regular price
Sale price
$22.00 USD
Unit price
per
Holiday Cards
The mood of nostalgia so beautifully painted in Holiday Homecoming makes the perfect holiday card. Celebrate the holidays by sending a holiday card that your family and friends will remember throughout the year.
• Beautiful full-color artwork
• Printed on premium card stock
• Inside Message: Happy Holidays
• 10 cards and white envelopes
• Packaging: Kraft paper window box, made with recycled materials
• Measures 4¼” x 5½”
Printed in U.S.A.
Painting Information
Mort Künstler has evoked here a past of only half a century, but his picture has the quality and the mood of a Currier and Ives print or, perhaps, of the genre paintings of a George Caleb Bingham, a Sidney Mount, an Eastman Johnson, who recorded so faithfully the lives of simple people in mid-nineteenth century America. Yet the scene here is modern enough to be, if not familiar, at least recognizable, and the juxtaposition of the horse-drawn wagon, the “depot hack,” with its Model T engine and its specially fabricated body, and the railroad train seems natural enough. – Henry Steele Commager (1986)
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The mood of nostalgia so beautifully painted in Holiday Homecoming makes the perfect holiday card. Celebrate the holidays by sending a holiday card that your family and friends will remember throughout the year.
• Beautiful full-color artwork
• Printed on premium card stock
• Inside Message: Happy Holidays
• 10 cards and white envelopes
• Packaging: Kraft paper window box, made with recycled materials
• Measures 4¼” x 5½”
Printed in U.S.A.
Painting Information
Mort Künstler has evoked here a past of only half a century, but his picture has the quality and the mood of a Currier and Ives print or, perhaps, of the genre paintings of a George Caleb Bingham, a Sidney Mount, an Eastman Johnson, who recorded so faithfully the lives of simple people in mid-nineteenth century America. Yet the scene here is modern enough to be, if not familiar, at least recognizable, and the juxtaposition of the horse-drawn wagon, the “depot hack,” with its Model T engine and its specially fabricated body, and the railroad train seems natural enough. – Henry Steele Commager (1986)