|
Home
Railroad
Collectibles-All
Railroad
Magazines
RR
Books
Collectible Plates
Information & shopping cart
New
Collector Plate website
Collectible plates LIST only - no photos
Transportation Items Air, Bus paper
Hess Trucks & Ertl die cast items
Books & Magazines
(Non Railroad)
Great Items
- Cottages, Cigarette posters
| |
| Go back to: Catalog> List of Products |
| View Cart |
|

|
 LOWc the last supper
|
|
Light of the World collection, "The Last Supper" by Christopher Nick. First issue of the series.
|
$35.00
|
| Light of the World collection, "The Last Supper" by Christopher Nick. First issue of the series.
|
|
|
|
Light of the World collection, "The Last Supper" by Christopher Nick. First issue of the series. The bradford exchange, 1996. Plate size approx. 8.5 by 6.5 inches. Suggested retail $55.00.
It was the last night on earth for Jesus Christ.
He gathered his twelve disciples around a table and prayed to his Father above for strength with words that are still echoed 500 years later...
This is my body, which is given for you, do this in remembrance of me.
With these sacred words, Jesus Christ acknowledged his approaching death on the cross, a loving sacrifice that ultimately, redeemed humankind.
Now 500 years after Leonardo da Vinci painted this eternal masterpiece on a Milan, Italy church wall, artist Christopher Nick is the first artist to re-create, rather than re-interpret, da Vinci's original The Last Supper in all its beautiful glory.
With a miraculous history all it's own—it began deteriorating less than 20 years after da Vinci completed it—and survived a bomb attack during World War II—The Last Supper is a wonder to behold. Stroke for stroke, color for color, Christopher Nick's "The Last Supper" is a remarkable new limited-edition collector's plate that gloriously portrays the life of Jesus Christ and celebrates the majesty of the artistic genius who created it.
The creation of the fine collector's plate you have just acquired and whose authenticity is certified by this document is the result of work by an international cadre of skilled artisans. After the plate art was created in the United States, a fine ceramic transfer, incorporating pigments carefully chosen to faithfully re-create the vibrant beauty of the artist's original, was created in France and Germany and permanently fired into the fine Japanese porcelain plate body at more than 1,460° Fahrenheit by talented craftsmen and craftswomen in the United States.
|
|
| |
|