Loretta Domaszewski "Three Willows" Museum Quality Giclee Print Reproduction from Original Oil Painting. Expressive Landscapes Collection. Her impressionist plein air landscapes resemble the light, colors and textures of art painted by Monet, Gaugin, and traditional artists of the impressionism style.
This print is available in the following formats and sizes:
Paper - 100% cotton rag
24" x 18" - $59.99
32" x 24" - $94.99
Canvas - 1 1/2" gallery wrap style (no frame needed, back stapled, contemporary black edges)
10" x 7.5" - $114.99
24" x 18" - $319.99
32" x 24" - $494.99
Free Shipping Anywhere in the United States! Please email us to obtain international shipping quote.
A giclee print is actually a digital inkjet print that can be produced on canvas or paper. The inkjet printer literally blends the colored inks as it prints to produce seamless, highly detailed prints of stunning color and detail. Loretta's giclee prints are made using pigmented inks which are much more stable and fade resistant than dye inks. A giclee using pigmented inks should not fade for a minimum of eighty years.
Loretta studies and paints the landscape surrounding wetlands, rivers, and lakes, where she has learned the importance of watershed and land conservation. The phenomenon of nature has become the source of her work in her expressive, impressionist style of painting.
Nature is in constant motion. Flowing water patterns, changing cloud formations, and waving fields of grass is the inspiration for creative visual poetry. Inspired by the illumination of light, Loretta expresses fleeting moments with multiple color washes and subtle blending transitions. Layers of pure oil pigments, saturated color and applied gestural brushstrokes, create a textured “moment in time.”
Domaszewski has a BFA from the Boston Museum School of Fine Arts, Tufts University and a K-12 Art Teaching Certificate from Brandeis University. Before moving to Bozeman in 1990, Loretta worked as Gallery Director of the Artist Association of Nantucket, Massachusetts and lived at the University of Massachusetts Field Station, where she discovered plein air oil painting and pastels. Loretta exhibits her paintings nationally and locally in galleries, museums, and universities.
Loretta lives to be outdoors in the Western Rocky Mountains, breathing it's fresh air, absorbing all that nature offers. You can see her hiking, biking, painting; following the trail systems full of flora, rivers and creeks with her husband, two children, and the family beagle.