Fine Art Poster
Iconic artworks with vivid colors using giclée fine art 12-color printing technology. Unmatched quality and durability using 200gsm smooth matte paper. Unframed; delivered flat or rolled.

Endre Bálint
A modernist interpretation of the biblical story of Jonas, featuring geometric abstraction and a muted, atmospheric colour palette.
Endre Bálint was a significant figure in twentieth-century Hungarian art, known for his synthesis of surrealist imagery and constructivist discipline. This work, depicting the biblical narrative of Jonas and the whale, demonstrates his characteristic approach to symbolic reduction. Rather than providing a literal representation of the story, Bálint employs geometric forms to suggest the encounter between the prophet and the sea creature. The composition is dominated by a central, dark, rounded form that occupies the upper portion of the canvas, representing the whale. Within this shape, a textured, crescent-like area suggests the interior space or the presence of Jonas, while a small, circular motif acts as a singular point of light or eye. Below this, the jagged, triangular shapes in muted ochre tones evoke a simplified, abstract coastline or mountainous terrain. The background is rendered in a flat, pale grey, which pushes the primary subjects forward and emphasises the graphic quality of the work. Bálint often drew upon personal mythology and religious themes, filtering them through a modernist lens. His work from this period reflects a move away from traditional representation towards a more conceptual visual language. The balance between the heavy, dark mass of the whale and the lighter, angular forms at the base creates a sense of tension and stillness. The surface treatment shows a subtle variation in texture, typical of his mid-career output, where he experimented with the physical properties of paint to define space. This print captures the quiet, contemplative nature of Bálint's approach to narrative, offering a stark and evocative interpretation of a classic subject.

Solid wood frames, UV-protected acrylic glaze, and archival backing for lasting durability.
12-colour giclée printing on FSC-certified 200gsm fine art paper, with lifetime fade resistance.
Designed in Britain and printed to order at your nearest hub, reducing waste and shipping distance.
Each frame is sealed with rigid backing and fixings attached, no extra effort required.
Real reviews from real customers
The son of a respected Budapest art critic, Endre Bálint grew up inside Hungarian intellectual life. His uncle was the writer and editor Ernő Osvát; his sister Klára married literary historian Antal Szerb. This background gave Bálint an unusually sharp sense of cultural conversation, and his paintings were always arguments with the world as much as images of it. He trained at the College of Applied Arts in Budapest from 1930, then studied under Vilmos Aba-Novák. The decisive turn came in Paris in 1937, where he encountered André Breton and participated in the International Surrealist World Exhibition. Bálint absorbed Dada, Constructivism, and Surrealism without settling into any of them. In 1945, back in Budapest, he co-founded the European School, a short-lived but serious attempt to reconnect Hungarian avant-garde painting with Western modernism. By 1947, Breton had opened the doors for him to show at the Réalité Nouvelle exhibition in Paris. After the 1956 uprising, Bálint left Hungary and lived in Paris until 1962. There he completed his most ambitious project: over a thousand illustrations for a Jerusalem Bible, a sustained private world of dreamlike figures and compressed memory-images. He worked across an unusual range of media: collage, linoleum engraving, plaster engraving, montage, stage design. His paintings fold childhood recollection into nightmarish internal landscapes, a grammar of frightening shapes drawn from the same reservoir. In his final decade, Bálint received the Kossuth Prize, Hungary's highest cultural honour. He died in Budapest on 3 May 1986, aged 72, still regarded as one of the most significant figures of the Hungarian avant-garde.
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