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What you can expect:
• Personal Service • Professional design options • Exceptional quality
The process:
We will email suggestions. You can request further options and make special requests.
Only acid free materials contact the art for long term preservation. Paper works are framed with plexi.
Canvas works are typically framed without plexi so that the vibrancy and interaction with light can be best appreciated.
Framing may be cancelled at any point before actual framing work begins.
Quality Guarantee. You may return your item for a refund within 15 days (excluding shipping).
Feel free to contact us with any questions you may have on this service!
No additional charge for shipping. Alaska and Hawaii addresses will have a higher rate which you can see in your cart by the "custom frame it" option.
William Tolliver (1951-2000) was a gifted and self-taught artist who was born to a poor farmer and grew up with 13 siblings in Vicksburg, Mississippi. Inspired even as a child, Tolliver learned by reading books and paint-by-the-numbers kits at home, since there was no art class at his school. By the time he was eight, he was already making remarkable progress, and he would mow lawns for the money to buy supplies. At 14, he dropped out of school and traveled to Los Angeles on a promise of work with the Job Corps - a carpenter teacher who had some art experience taught Tolliver what little he knew. By the 1980's he was married and living in Lafayette, Louisiana. With an impressive body of work, but not enough confidence in himself, he was surprised when his wife snuck his artwork out to a local gallery owner. His nine paintings sold in ten days, and the rest is history. He has been featured in major art publications, including The Art Gallery International and the International Review of African American Art. His works is in the permanent collections of the Corcoran Museum, McKissick Museum, Hampton University Museum, New Orleans Museum of Art and the Zigler Museum.