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Colección curada

Del mundo
las grandes pinturas,
para tus paredes

Reproducciones pintadas a mano de calidad de museo e impresiones en lienzo de archivo de las obras más célebres de la historia. Cada pieza investigada, elaborada y entregada con rigor curatorial.

400K+
obras catalogadas
30,640
artistas
100%
pintado a mano
Maestros del lienzo

Los Grandes Artistas

Los pintores que moldearon la forma en que la humanidad percibe la belleza, la luz y la forma. Pasa el cursor para explorar sus obras más emblemáticas.

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John Singer Sargent
John Singer Sargent

¡Explora las obras maestras de John Singer Sargent! Conocido como impresionista americano por sus retratos como 'Madame X', paisajes y por capturar la elegancia de la Época Dorada. ¡Descubre su arte hoy mismo!

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Sir Alfred James Munnings
Sir Alfred James Munnings

Descubre al maestro Alfred Munnings: pintor de caballos, escenas rurales y cazador del impresionismo inglés. ¡Un legado artístico atemporal!

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Tiziano
Tiziano

Tiziano Vecellio, conocido como Titian, fue el pintor más destacado de la pintura veneciana del siglo XVI y pionero en el uso del color, dejando un legado artístico eterno.

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Hilaire-germain-edgar Degas
Hilaire-germain-edgar Degas

Edgar Degas: un revolucionario pintor francés, famoso por sus cautivadoras bailarinas, escenas parisinas e innovadoras técnicas. Un verdadero maestro del arte moderno.

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Wassily Wassilyevich Kandinsky
Wassily Wassilyevich Kandinsky

Descubre a Kandinsky (1866-1944), pionero del arte abstracto! Explora su expresionismo vibrante, temas espirituales y legado Bauhaus con reproducciones impresionantes.

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Camille Pissarro
Camille Pissarro

Explore la obra de Camille Pissarro: paisajes e escenas de la vida cotidiana impresionistas y neoimpresionistas. Una figura clave que influyó a Van Gogh, Cézanne y más.

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Eugène Henri Paul Gauguin
Eugène Henri Paul Gauguin

Explore Paul Gauguin's (1848-1903) arte vibrante del Postimpresionismo, pionero en el Simbolismo y el Sintetismo. Descubre pinturas icónicas de Tahití y su influencia en el arte moderno. #Gauguin

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Pedro Pablo Rubens
Pedro Pablo Rubens

Sir Peter Paul Rubens: Maestro del Barroco flamenco. Famoso por composiciones dinámicas, colores vibrantes y obras icónicas como 'La Masacre de los Inocentes'. Descubre su vida y arte.

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Thomas Gainsborough
Thomas Gainsborough

Descubre a Thomas Gainsborough (1727-1788), pintor británico clave del siglo XVIII. Retratos elegantes, paisajes idílicos y pinceladas sueltas definen su legado en el arte.

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Joaquín Sorolla Y Bastida
Joaquín Sorolla Y Bastida

Descubre a Joaquín Sorolla (1863-1923), maestro del Realismo y Luminismo español! Explora sus vibrantes pinturas llenas de luz mediterránea, playas, retratos y temas sociales. ¡Una figura clave del Impresionismo!

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Giuseppe Arcimboldo
Giuseppe Arcimboldo

Descubre Giuseppe Arcimboldo (1527-1593), maestro del manierismo y creador de retratos surrealistas con frutas, verduras y objetos. ¡Arte innovador e ingenioso!

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Jean-baptiste-camille Corot
Jean-baptiste-camille Corot

Descubre Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (1796-1875), pintor francés clave que fusiona Neoclasicismo e Impresionismo. Explora paisajes serenos, retratos realistas y su legado artístico.

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Cada reproducción se estudia a partir de archivos museísticos de alta resolución, se pinta sobre lienzo de lino o algodón y se somete a una inspección bajo estándares de conservación de museo antes de salir de nuestro atelier.

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La Colección

Obras de arte más populares — por período

Recorra ocho siglos de logros artísticos —desde el oro bizantino hasta el pluralismo contemporáneo— y encuentre las obras que le inspiren.

Colección completa →
01

Early Medieval

c. 500–1000 CE

Characterized by the fusion of classical Greco-Roman, Christian, and barbarian artistic traditions across Europe. This era saw the height of Byzantine imperial splendor, the development of intricate insular illumination, and the rise of Carolingian and Ottonian monastic workshops. Art primarily served liturgical functions, emphasizing spiritual abstraction over naturalistic representation.

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02

High Medieval

c. 1000–1300 CE

Marked by a dramatic expansion of urban centers and religious institutions across Western Europe. This period witnessed the development of monumental Romanesque stone sculpture and the subsequent birth of the Gothic style, defined by soaring rib vaults and luminous stained glass. Imagery became more expressive, reflecting a deeply structured feudal and ecclesiastical worldview.

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03

Late Medieval

c. 1300–1400 CE

A transformative era defined by profound social shifts and the devastating impact of the Black Death. Artistic production responded with intensely emotive, humanized religious imagery. The International Gothic style brought refined courtly elegance to panel painting, while Italian Proto-Renaissance pioneers began reintroducing spatial depth, laying the groundwork for humanistic naturalism.

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04

Renaissance

c. 1400–1600 CE

Characterized by a self-conscious revival of classical antiquity and the rise of intellectual humanism. Artists revolutionized visual culture through the mathematical mastery of linear perspective, anatomical precision, and the development of oil painting techniques. No longer mere artisans, creators achieved elevated status, balancing secular civic pride with innovative sacred commissions.

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05

Early Modern

c. 1600–1800 CE

Spanning the dynamic shifts of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, this era encompasses the theatrical grandeur of the Baroque and the delicate intimacy of the Rococo. Driven by Counter-Reformation zeal and the wealth of global trade networks, artists manipulated light, shadow, and scale to create emotionally charged, politically potent visual environments.

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06

19th Century

c. 1800–1900 CE

An era of rapid industrialization and socio-political upheaval that shattered traditional academic hegemony. Artistic production fragmented into a succession of revolutionary movements: the emotional intensity of Romanticism, the unvarnished truth of Realism, and the ephemeral light studies of Impressionism. This period fundamentally redefined the relationship between the artist and modern society.

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07

Modern

c. 1900–1970 CE

Defined by a radical rejection of traditional representation and the celebration of the avant-garde. Spurred by global conflicts and technological acceleration, artists embraced abstraction and conceptual experimentation. Movements such as Cubism, Expressionism, and Pop Art interrogated the very definition of art, reflecting the fragmented psychological landscape of twentieth-century life.

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08

Contemporary

c. 1970–Present

Encompassing diverse artistic practices from the late twentieth century to the present day. Characterized by pluralism and postmodern critique, this era moves beyond singular movements to embrace installation, performance, and digital media. Artists engage directly with global networks, questioning identities, geopolitical structures, and the boundaries of an increasingly interconnected visual culture.

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Guía curatorial

Movimientos que cambiaron nuestra forma de ver — explorar por movimiento

Explora nuestra colección a través de los movimientos que transformaron la forma en que los pintores veían — y cómo el mundo veía las pinturas.

Ver todos los movimientos →
01

Realism

Rejecting idealized academic conventions and dramatic romanticism, Realism emerged in the mid-19th century as a deliberate effort to document everyday life with unvarnished objectivity. Painters focused on the working class, mundane tasks, and contemporary social realities, favoring earthy palettes and honest representation over mythologized or heroic subjects.

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02

American Realism

Developed in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, this movement captured the changing landscape of American life with profound honesty. Artists documented rapidly growing urban centers, industrial labor, and quiet rural communities, creating a distinct visual identity that reflected the social transformations, grit, and unique character of a developing nation.

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03

Romanticism

Arising in the late 18th century as a critique of Enlightenment rationalism, Romanticism championed intense emotion, individual imagination, and the awesome power of nature. Artworks from this period frequently feature dramatic compositions, rich colorism, and a fascination with the sublime, emphasizing human vulnerability against vast, untamable elements.

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04

Impressionism

Originating in late 19th-century France, Impressionism revolutionized Western painting by discarding formal studio practices for plein-air execution. Characterized by loose, visible brushwork and a vivid palette, artists prioritized the shifting effects of light, atmospheric conditions, and transient everyday moments over precise line and traditional narrative content.

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05

Post-Impressionism

Emerging as an extension of and reaction to Impressionism, this diverse late 19th-century movement shifted focus from objective sensory perceptions to structured, symbolic expression. Artists employed vivid, non-naturalistic color, thick paint application, and defined geometric forms to explore personal psychological depths and greater formal order on the canvas.

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06

Symbolism

This late 19th-century avant-garde movement rejected literal representation in favor of expressing ideas, psychological states, and spiritual truths through metaphorical imagery. Heavily influenced by poetry and mysticism, artists constructed dreamlike, allegorical scenes that prioritized internal emotions, mythology, and the subconscious over the objective observation of the natural world.

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07

Neoclassicism

Inspired by the archaeological rediscovery of classical antiquity, Neoclassicism dominated the late 18th century by emphasizing rationality, order, and civic virtue. Reacting against late Baroque decorative excesses, paintings feature austere, symmetric compositions, linear precision, smooth surfaces, and historical subject matter designed to inspire moral clarity and political duty.

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08

Art Nouveau

Flourishing at the turn of the 20th century, Art Nouveau sought to break down the traditional hierarchy between fine art and applied arts. Visually defined by sinuous, flowing lines, organic curves, and elegant botanical motifs, the movement aimed to create a harmoniously integrated aesthetic environment encompassing painting, architecture, and decorative objects.

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09

Fauvism

Pioneered in the early 20th century, Fauvism was characterized by its revolutionary use of explosive, non-naturalistic color and raw, visible brushwork. Artists liberated color from its traditional descriptive role, employing pure, unmodulated pigments directly from the tube to project intense emotion and establish structural rhythm independent of literal reality.

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10

Baroque

Encouraged by the Counter-Reformation in the 17th century, Baroque art is defined by dynamic movement, theatrical grandeur, and intense emotional appeal. Masters used pronounced chiaroscuro — a sharp contrast between deep shadow and piercing light — to craft deeply immersive, awe-inspiring compositions that engaged the viewer's spirituality through vivid sensory experiences.

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11

Renaissance

Marking the transition from the medieval period to modernity, the Renaissance witnessed a profound revival of classical Greco-Roman learning and philosophy. Artistically, this era introduced revolutionary advancements in linear perspective, anatomical precision, and balanced, harmonious proportions, synthesizing deep Christian devotion with a newly awakened scientific humanism and naturalism.

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12

Expressionism

Originating in early 20th-century northern Europe, Expressionism prioritized the depiction of subjective psychological states over objective external reality. Artists utilized radical formal distortion, harsh jagged lines, and jarring, unnatural colors to project internal anxieties, alienation, and raw emotional intensity, frequently offering a pointed critique of modern industrial society.

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13

Surrealism

Founded in the 1920s, Surrealism aimed to bridge the fractured boundaries between dream and reality by liberating the creative power of the subconscious mind. Influenced deeply by psychoanalysis, artists utilized unexpected, bizarre juxtapositions, automatism, and illusionistic techniques to challenge rational thought and explore the poetic logic of the unconscious.

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14

Cubism

Co-founded in the early 20th century, Cubism radically dismantled centuries of traditional perspective by deconstructing objects into flat, geometric facets. Instead of depicting a subject from a single static viewpoint, artists rendered figures from multiple angles simultaneously, asserting the canvas as a conceptual, two-dimensional construction rather than an illusionistic window.

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15

Pop Art

Emerging in the mid-20th century, Pop Art challenged the elitism of traditional fine art by incorporating imagery from popular culture, mass media, and consumerism. Utilizing commercial printing techniques, comic strip aesthetics, and bold advertising palettes, artists mirrored and critiqued post-war society, effectively blurring the boundaries between high and low culture.

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16

Abstract Expressionism

Developing in post-World War II New York, Abstract Expressionism shifted the focus of painting to pure abstraction and monumental scale. Through spontaneous gestural brushwork, action painting, and expansive color fields, artists sought to communicate universal human emotions and cross-cultural spiritual truths directly from the subconscious, emphasizing the physical act of creation.

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17

Modernism

Spanning the late 19th to mid-20th centuries, Modernism represents a broad, experimental break from classical academic traditions in response to rapid industrialization and global change. Embracing the ethos of constant reinvention, artists systematically questioned the nature of representation, exploring fragmentation, abstraction, and the intrinsic qualities of their artistic mediums.

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18

Contemporary

Produced from the late 20th century to the present, Contemporary art is characterized by a globally diverse, institutionally critical, and technologically fluid landscape. Moving beyond traditional boundaries of style and medium, artists utilize conceptual frameworks, digital tools, and multimedia installations to engage dynamically with urgent themes of identity, globalization, and socio-political critique.

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Browse by movement

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Tres cuestionarios Una pregunta por persona

Elige una respuesta a continuación — luego sigue el enlace para completar el desafío de cinco preguntas en su página dedicada.

Museum Trivia
Pregunta 1 de 5

¿Cuál es el enfoque principal del Museo Histórico Alemán? — Berlín, Alemania

  • Artefactos antiguos de Egipto
  • Historia alemana y cultura europea
  • Maestrosas obras de arte renacentistas
Artwork Trivia
Pregunta 1 de 5

¿Quién es el artista de la obra 'Adoración de los Magos'?

  • Cimabue
  • Giotto di Bondone
  • Duccio di Buoninsegna
Artist Trivia
Pregunta 1 de 5

¿En qué año nació Edward Lear?

  • 1852
  • 1812
  • 1798
La promesa del Atelier

Pintado con intención
Entregado con cuidado.

01

Investigación de rigor museístico

Cada reproducción comienza en nuestro archivo. Estudiamos la obra original mediante fotografía de calidad museística y catálogos especializados para asegurar que cada color, textura y matiz proporcional sea exacto.

02

Pintado a mano por especialistas

Nuestro estudio cuenta con pintores formados en técnica clásica, muchos de ellos con licenciaturas en bellas artes y especializaciones en periodos o escuelas específicas. Cada artista es asignado a las obras que mejor se adaptan a su maestría.

03

Solo materiales de archivo

Lienzos de lino y algodón. Óleos con una resistencia a la luz superior a 100 años. Barnices con una fórmula idéntica a los utilizados en la conservación de museos. Porque una gran reproducción merece el mismo cuidado que la original.