Sunflower Wall Mirror, "Wildflowers" - Wall Decor - Peruvian Handicrafts

A bouquet wildflowers bloom across this accent wall mirror employing the delicate peruvian handpainted glass style, a technique that comes from the time of the spanish colonization of Peru (XV Century). Made by our Artist Edmundo Contreras. This mirror has a wooden frame finished in black. Measuring 23.6" Hx23.6" Wx1.26" D overall, this sunflower mirror arrives ready to hang right out of the box.

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Our Awards:


♦ Edmundo Contreras, 1st place winner in the UNESCO Crafts Prize for Latin America / Caribbean (painted glass-1995), 
♦ Edmundo Contreras, Received the Medal of Vizcardo and Guzman as a master artisan, awarded by the Congress of the Republic of Peru in 2002. 
♦ Winner of the award for best export quality product issued by ICC-MINCETUR PROYECT PERU (2003). 
♦ Prize: Most outstanding company in the "EXPORTING ROUTE" by the Ministry of Foreign Trade of Peru and PROMPERU (2014)
♦ Prize: Most outstanding company in the category "EXPORTA EASY" by Ministry of Foreign Trade of Peru and PROMPERU (2016)

Item Details: 
ID: MEC201910
SIZE:
  
Exterior Frame: 23.6"H x 23.6"W x 1.26"D (Ø 60cm x 3.2cm D)
Central Mirror: Ø10.2" (Ø 26 cm)
Weight: 5.50 Lb (2.5Kg)

Features:
- Reverse painted glass 
- Mohena wood, plywood.
- Signed by the artist
- Ready to Hang!

ABOUT PERUVIAN HANDICRAFTS

In the XV Century, glass arrived in Peru brought by the Spaniards in the form of mirrors and picture
frames destined to decorate churches, convents and houses of the time. Also, they brought beads from Murano, an Italian island next to Venice, where the greatest production of glass and crystal, between the XVIII and XIX, took place.
The Spanish technique of stained glass windows, of great Arab influence, were copied and modified by Peruvian craftsmen. They developed new regional styles, such as the andahuaylino (reverse-painted glass frames), the cajamarquino (thoroughly painted glass), the Cusco style (carved wood frames that include painted glass), the mixed style or cuscaja (using gold leaf on the carved picture
frames and on painted glass) and the polychrome style (using multiple multicolored hues). These styles can be observed in museum collections, in decoration of church altars and convents of different regions of the Perú.