

Klee made A Woman For Gods in December 1938, two years before his death, during the extraordinary final burst of work that saw him produce over a thousand pieces in 1939 alone. A figure is outlined in thick red lines against a churning field of red, pink, and white, with a single blue dot near the lower right. The late work is larger in scale and bolder in line than his Bauhaus-era paintings — the fine crosshatching and delicate color of the 1920s replaced by heavy, simplified forms. Klee was suffering from scleroderma by this point, the autoimmune disease that would kill him in 1940, and the speed and scale of his late output is partly a response to knowing he was running out of time.

See Also

Romantic Fantasy
Edvard Weie

Landscape with Trees
Arthur B. Davies

End of the century, 31 December 1899
Jacek Malczewski

Four on the Beach
Karl Hofer

Die Geliebte
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

Vénus récréée par la musique
Raoul Dufy

Still Life with Pears and Lemons
Raoul Dufy

Garten im Orient (1937)
Paul Klee

Sein Schatten
Paul Klee

Gezeichnetes Mädchen
Paul Klee

Blue Night
Paul Klee

Untitled (c. 1938)
Paul Klee

Westfälische Landschaft
Christian Rohlfs

Tulpen
Christian Rohlfs

Nude with raised arms
Karl Hofer

Untitled VI
Henry Lyman Saÿen

Les Arbres en Sologne
Louis Valtat

Flowers
Henry Lyman Saÿen

Composition (Round and Oval Forms)
Adolf Hölzel

Clouds in Finland
Konrad Krzyżanowski

Der Gelb-Grune
Paul Klee

Study of Clouds
Konrad Krzyżanowski

Untitled
Jankel Adler

Dogs
Jankel Adler

Squatting Nude
Jankel Adler

Seated Woman
Jankel Adler

Pale Face with Red Hair
Jules Schmalzigaug

Mother and Child
Jankel Adler

Seascape
Jean Brusselmans

Untitled (IV)
Arthur Dove

Untitled (III)
Arthur Dove

Untitled
Arthur Dove

Untitled V
Arthur Dove

Untitled II
Arthur Dove

Untitled Sketch
Arthur Dove

Land and Seascape
Arthur Dove

Pottery Still Life
Josef Scharl

Still Life
Josef Scharl

Ascending Moon (I)
Josef Scharl

Sculptor's Studio
Josef Scharl

Five Extended Figures
Sophie Taeuber-Arp

Still Life
Edvard Weie

Romantic Fantasy
Edvard Weie

Nature morte aux poissons
Youla Chapoval

Porteuse de Vase
Sophie Taeuber-Arp (Swiss, 1889–1943)

Bird Motif Composition (detail)
Sophie Taeuber-Arp

Still Life with Lacquer Screen
Francis Cadell

The Red Chair (The Blue Jug)
Francis Cadell

Fire in the Evening
Paul Klee

Four on the Beach
Karl Hofer

Meditation
Alexej von Jawlensky

Two Bathing Women and a Figure from Behind
Leo Gestel

Die Geliebte
Ernst Ludwig Kirchner

The Kiss
Jankel Adler

Der Schauspieler
Jankel Adler

Abstract Composition
Jankel Adler

Rose and Locust Stump
Arthur Dove

Departure from Three Points
Arthur Dove

A Blue Jay Flew Up in a Tree
Arthur Dove

Form no. 11, red
Onchi Kōshirō

Komposition in Blau
Otto Freundlich

Komposition (1938)
Otto Freundlich

Galloping Horses
Arnold Peter Weisz-Kubínčan

Man's Face
Arnold Peter Weisz-Kubínčan

Bildnis eines Asiaten
Paul Klee

Junges Mädchen
Jankel Adler

Figures
Jankel Adler

Der Beginn des Aufruhrs
Jankel Adler

Blue Night
Paul Klee

Garten im Orient (1937)
Paul Klee

Sein Schatten
Paul Klee

The Man of Confusion
Paul Klee

Gezeichnetes Mädchen
Paul Klee

Westfälische Landschaft
Christian Rohlfs

Untitled (Textile Design No. VI)
Frances Hodgkins
Our Process
Every piece in the archive goes through a deliberate process — part historian, part designer, part obsessive.
The thrill of the hunt
We pull from institutional archives, digitized collections, and the deep corners of the art world to find pieces that are both culturally and visually relevent, yet underexplored. We skip the hyper trendy pieces (looking at you, Matisse cutouts) in favor of niche work with a good story.
Context is everything
We dig into the provenance, history, and context around each piece — the artist, the period, the story that makes it worth living with. You don't have to be an art historian to appreciate knowing the who/what/why of a work of art, and it makes it that much more satisfying to live with every day.
Where a scan becomes a print
Institutional scans are often remarkable, but they're also imperfect: color casts from old photography, dust and scratches from the scanning bed, compression artifacts, uneven lighting across a large canvas. What we don't touch is the painting itself — the craquelure, the patina, the brushwork, the small marks of time that make a 200-year-old work look 200 years old. We restore the photograph of the painting, not the painting.
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Color is adjusted with restraint. We reference historical materials when possible and avoid over-saturation or heavy-handed edits. The aim is a result that feels balanced, natural, and consistent with how the work was intended to be seen.
We don't do guesswork
Each piece is reviewed at print size to ensure clarity, contrast, and overall quality. Small issues become obvious at scale, so we take the time to catch them before anything is produced.

Common Questions
Giclée (zhee-clay) is a fine art printing process using archival pigment inks on museum-quality paper. The colors are richer, the detail is sharper, and the prints are rated to last 100+ years without fading. It's the same method used by galleries and museums for exhibition-quality reproductions.
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