Exquisitely curated museum-quality art by some of the best artists. New exclusive pieces weekly, starting at $15 (Yes!) BROWSE NOW! ▶
|
20 x 16 inches (50.8 x 40.6 cm) edition of 100 at $200 |
For detailed information on shipping rates for this product, please click here.
Limited-edition sold exclusively on ArtWeLove for a limited time only (6/6 to 6/26)
PRINTS WILL ONLY SHIP 7-12 BUSINESS DAYS AFTER THE CLOSE OF THE SALE ON 6/26.
Total number of editions will be a function of the total number of buyers, with a maximum cap of 100 editions per print
Edition embossed with ArtWeLove's seal of authenticity in the lower left-hand corner.
Made with fade-resistant, archival-quality ink
Printed on 100% cotton rag, acid-free and ph neutral watercolor paper
Paper stock designed for professional artworks, featuring brilliant whites and a weight of 255 gsm
Dimensions listed are for the size of paper containing the image, not the image size itself.
This edition has a minimum 1/2 inch border.
This print ships unframed. For framing suggestions, please read below.
All official ArtWeLove editions are supervised by the artist and paired with a signed Certificate of Authenticity unless otherwise noted. ArtWeLove occasionally provides carefully select editions produced by other companies to our members, which may not have a signed certificate and are noted as such.
On our Spring Schedule, most prints ship everywhere in the U.S. within 7-12 business days (often earlier). Learn more.
For a contemporary look, use a 1/2-inch face, white finished frame.
More on framing recommendationsInternet Week NY Benefit Edition
Benefit edition directly supporting the NYC Department of Education’s general fund
One out of four benefit editions created especially for CAN YOU DRAW THE INTERNET
Why We Love It Read our newsletter
Artist Statement
Meet the Singularities Presents: Portrait of Larry Page
Imagine being a Mayan Indian ages ago declaring that 2012 is the year the world as we know it will end. The problem for the Mayans back then was that they could not conceive of how a technological revolution connects people and information independent of space and time. The Mayans simply accepted that the human condition born from millions of years of evolution would end and evolve into another form of consciousness. We now know that they are talking about "The Singularities Effect" (billions of human brains weaved together in a vast data net that form a new higher level intelligence).
Whether or not you believe in the mysticism of the Mayans is unimportant what matters is the mounting scientific evidence that we are now witnessing changes to the human condition that rival the moments when we climbed down from the trees, walked upright and began using tools.
For us modern humans the issue at hand is perspective. How can the soon-to-be redundant human species best cope with the tectonic changes wrought by technology? Can an "elegant portal" from the existing human condition be built to the unknown world of the Singularity? Does the human race need to defend itself? Can we control our own evolution?
As the creator and designer of Google, Larry Page is presiding over the Singularities' entry into our world.
The Meet the Singularities series is designed to be viewed and processed by fully sentient Singularities from our near future. Price for the original painting: $1,000,000 for Larry Page or $100,000 for everyone else (excluding Mr. Brin). 3' x 8' acrylic and pastel on canvas.
More Benefit Editions created especially for CAN YOU DRAW THE INTERNET
WARMONEYEATXXXXUSAXXXXXBUYLOVE
10 x 8 inches at $50 Buy Now
the gleam that turned on an exploded novel
16 x 16 inches at $200 Buy Now
20 x 20 inches at $250 Buy Now
Josh Harris is the founder of JupiterResearch and Pseudo.com. Harris owned and operated Livingston Orchards, LLC, a commercial apple farm in Columbia County, New York from 2001–2006 and is currently the CEO of The Wired City, an Internet television network based in New York City. Widely recognized as a web pioneer, Harris is also known for his art projects, primarily those that centered around his experiment "Quiet: We Live In Public".