"The Atomic Age" Fine Art Print — leahnadeau Skip to content
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"The Atomic Age" Fine Art Print

Original price $70.00 - Original price $615.00
Original price
$169.99
$70.00 - $615.00
Current price $169.99

PRODUCT INFORMATION: All artworks are printed using premium archival-grade pigments on gallery-quality fine art paper or satin canvas. The materials and process ensure the prints retain their color and vibrancy for 100+ years.

Paper prints are shipped rolled in a tube and will need to be framed by you. Canvas prints come wired and ready to hang on your wall, with 1.5-inch-thick dark brown sides. They are stretched over a 1.5-inch-thick frame, with the sides finished in the painting's main color. 

FRAMED PRINTS: Framed canvas prints come with a 0.55-inch-thick floater frame in either black or walnut. 

SHIPPING: All artwork is made to order and ships worldwide. Your artwork will be carefully produced and shipped from my fine art printing facility here in Portland, Oregon. Processing time: 5-7 days for unframed prints to arrive, 10-14 days for canvas prints to arrive. I offer complimentary US shipping. When your order ships, you’ll receive an email with a tracking link to follow its status.

INSPIRATION: Technically, the Atomic Age is considered the era after the first detonation of a nuclear weapon in 1945. These would be very uncertain times for Americans, as they faced daily fears of war.

History seems to repeat itself, doesn’t it? Has the “Atomic Age” truly ever ended? Or is this still the age of the nuclear bomb and uncertain times?

This painting is inspired by wartime art across all media that expressed emotions in a time of uncertainty and revolutionized how we would experience abstraction for the rest of time. It’s a nod to the greats like Mark Rothko, Jackson Pollock, and Jasper Johns- artists who used color and form to pioneer the art world forever. 

 

About The Artist

I'm Leah Nadeau, and I make abstract acrylic paintings shaped by a deep love of architecture, a film school education that taught me to see the world differently, and synesthesia, which means music looks like colors in my head. Each piece is an original, made slowly, one at a time, built to anchor a room and quietly change how it feels to be in it.

Rooted in Mid-Century Modern Design and themes of resilience and joy, my work becomes the focal point around which collectors build entire spaces.

Featured in Atomic Ranch Magazine, exhibited at the famous Modernism Week in Palm Springs, and works permanently installed at the Henry Ford Health Cancer Institute in Detroit, Michigan.