The Future is Endless and Inevitable - Greeting Cards (10-pack)

£22.95

Greeting cards with CP Gill Art’s artwork “The Future is Endless and Inevitable”. The inside is left empty for personal messages to be added. Each card comes with a blank kraft envelope.

  • One size: 7” × 5” / 17.8cm × 12.7cm

  • Mohawk 324gsm card

  • Includes 10 cards and 10 envelopes

Artist’s statement of the original artwork.

Title: The Future is Endless and Inevitable

Oil on canvas - Size 200x250cm -  Year 2006

This picture was painted at my studio at 696 Weihai Road, Shanghai. At that time there was a tumultuous wave of optimism, and this painting matches with the same size picture ‘RMB in the money of the future.’ There was a sense anything was possible, and people were redesigning themselves to meet an unknown but positive future. This work is currently in Suzhou and was an extension on my series of fake propaganda posters. It was shown in several exhibitions, at Shanghart, Beijing, and in the solo show ‘City of Gold’ at Shanghai Art Museum in 2007, visited by 36,000 people.

Greeting cards with CP Gill Art’s artwork “The Future is Endless and Inevitable”. The inside is left empty for personal messages to be added. Each card comes with a blank kraft envelope.

  • One size: 7” × 5” / 17.8cm × 12.7cm

  • Mohawk 324gsm card

  • Includes 10 cards and 10 envelopes

Artist’s statement of the original artwork.

Title: The Future is Endless and Inevitable

Oil on canvas - Size 200x250cm -  Year 2006

This picture was painted at my studio at 696 Weihai Road, Shanghai. At that time there was a tumultuous wave of optimism, and this painting matches with the same size picture ‘RMB in the money of the future.’ There was a sense anything was possible, and people were redesigning themselves to meet an unknown but positive future. This work is currently in Suzhou and was an extension on my series of fake propaganda posters. It was shown in several exhibitions, at Shanghart, Beijing, and in the solo show ‘City of Gold’ at Shanghai Art Museum in 2007, visited by 36,000 people.