Boy with a Horse in a Stable T-Shirt

From $17.02

Boy with a Horse in a Stable by Jacques Albert Senave printed on a T-Shirt

Description

Boy with a Horse in a Stable by Jacques Albert Senave printed on a T-Shirt

About the T-Shirt

Regular fit

Standard length, the fabric easily gives into movement

Casual wear

A classic, everyday option loved by our customers

Side-seamed

Constructed by sewing two parts together, creating a fitted look

The Unisex Staple T-Shirt feels soft and light with just the right amount of stretch. It’s comfortable and flattering for all. We can’t compliment this shirt enough–it’s one of our crowd favorites, and it’s sure to be your next favorite too! 

  • Solid colors are 100% Airlume combed and ring-spun cotton
  • Ash color is 99% combed and ring-spun cotton, 1% polyester
  • Heather colors are 52% combed and ring-spun cotton, 48% polyester
  • Athletic and Black Heather are 90% combed and ring-spun cotton, 10% polyester
  • Heather Prism colors are 99% combed and ring-spun cotton, 1% polyester
  • Fabric weight: 4.2 oz./yd.² (142 g/m²)
  • Pre-shrunk fabric
  • 30 singles
  • Side-seamed construction
  • Tear-away label
  • Shoulder-to-shoulder taping
  • Blank product sourced from Nicaragua, Mexico, Honduras, or the US

Jacques Albert Senave (1758–1823)

Jacques-Albert Senave was a Flemish painter active in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

He was born in Lo, Austrian Netherlands. After studying painting in the United Provinces, he went to Paris in 1780. His paintings include genre scenes and a Seven Works of Mercy he painted for the church in Lo.

Among Senave’s works is a Parody of Zeuxis which depicts the legend of the Greek artist Zeuxis selecting five female models and combining their finest features into one image of ideal beauty. In Senave’s painting, the five models are overseen by a procuress, and the painter is accompanied by a dog “whose misshapen form suggests that he was composed using Zeuxis’s famous method; only in this case the result is a bizarre, vaguely canine hybrid rather than an example of ideal beauty”, according to the art historian Elizabeth Mansfield. Meanwhile, a man in the foreground clutches a framed painting. Mansfield says the painting “humorously exposes the circuit of aesthetic-erotic-commercial traffic embedded within the Zeuxis myth”.

Senave died in Paris in 1823.

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