Easter-Bonus Discount at artSOLITAIRE. - 6.5% discount on online purchases (except gift vouchers) - 20.03.-30.03.2025
Easter-Bonus Discount at artSOLITAIRE. - 6.5% discount on online purchases (except gift vouchers) - 20.03.-30.03.2025
Bea Schubert:
Picture "Life Loves you No.19" (2025)
Proportional view
Picture "Life Loves you No.19" (2025)
Bea Schubert:
Picture "Life Loves you No.19" (2025)

Quick info

Acrylic, Colour Spray, Coloured Pencil | Canvas, stretched on stretcher frame | Format 50 x 70 cm (H/W) | picture hang up | signed certificate of authenticity

incl. tax plus shipping

Delivery time: approx. 2 weeks

Picture "Life Loves you No.19" (2025)
Bea Schubert: Picture "Life Loves you No.19" (2025)

Detailed description

Picture "Life Loves you No.19" (2025)

Currently on exhibition. Please contact ArtSolitaire. I painted this work, bursting with joie de vivre, with high-quality acrylic paints, Schminck acrylic ink and neon pastels. It is protected from UV light with a silk matt glaze. "If you love life, life will love you back." (Arthur Rubinstein) The picture is not just a work of art, but a tribute to the Mediterranean lifestyle full of joie de vivre and lightness.

Producer: ars mundi Edition Max Büchner GmbH, Bödekerstraße 13, 30161 Hanover, Germany Email: info@arsmundi.de

About Bea Schubert

The magic of being a child: Bea Schubert's colorful rebellion against the everyday My artistic expression is a passionate rebellion against the dreariness of everyday life, a manifesto for the joy and wonder of being a child.
In my works, I unfold a world where light-heartedness and imagination reign, where colors come alive and hope and courage take on a tangible form. My artwork encourages people to let go of their everyday worries and instead immerse themselves in a world where joy, creativity and light-heartedness reign. Bea Schubert, born in 1959, is an artist who has not only seen the world, but has absorbed it deeply. Her artistic journey began with her studies at the Braunschweig University of Art under the guidance of Professor Hermann Albert, where she learned the basics of painting. But the real turning point in her career came after her studies, when she decided to leave the conventional path and spend seven years exploring the world with nothing but a backpack.
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