Meet Me In Paris, Paris 2017

ab 6.000,00 €
size:

Museum Archival Print
in following sizes:

60×45 cm (Edition 25 + 3 AP), 6.000,- Euro
80×60 cm (Edition 15 + 2 AP), 9.000,- Euro
120×90 cm (Edition 7 + 2 AP), 13.000,- Euro
180x135 cm (Edition 5 + 2 AP), 22.000,- Euro

About this fine art print:

For centuries, Paris has symbolized romance, dreams, and artistic freedom. Writers, painters, and photographers have used the city as a stage for emotions that are difficult to express: waiting, remembering, hoping. The idea of meeting someone in Paris often carries a sense of anticipation—the feeling that something meaningful might happen there.

Longing has always played a central role in art. Artists transform feelings of absence, desire, and memory into images, colors, and stories. A quiet street at dusk, a light in a café window, or the reflection of the city in the Seine can become symbols of this emotional space between people.

In this way, “Meet me in Paris” becomes a poetic motif. It speaks about distance and closeness at the same time—about the beauty of waiting, imagining, and dreaming of a place where two paths might finally meet.

Museum Archival Print
in following sizes:

60×45 cm (Edition 25 + 3 AP), 6.000,- Euro
80×60 cm (Edition 15 + 2 AP), 9.000,- Euro
120×90 cm (Edition 7 + 2 AP), 13.000,- Euro
180x135 cm (Edition 5 + 2 AP), 22.000,- Euro

About this fine art print:

For centuries, Paris has symbolized romance, dreams, and artistic freedom. Writers, painters, and photographers have used the city as a stage for emotions that are difficult to express: waiting, remembering, hoping. The idea of meeting someone in Paris often carries a sense of anticipation—the feeling that something meaningful might happen there.

Longing has always played a central role in art. Artists transform feelings of absence, desire, and memory into images, colors, and stories. A quiet street at dusk, a light in a café window, or the reflection of the city in the Seine can become symbols of this emotional space between people.

In this way, “Meet me in Paris” becomes a poetic motif. It speaks about distance and closeness at the same time—about the beauty of waiting, imagining, and dreaming of a place where two paths might finally meet.