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White-coloured hand-screen-printed t-shirt, design by Paul Noble
The T-shirt is unisex style. It fits girls and boys. For most girls a size S fits perfectly.
Please see measurements below:
Measurements for the different sizes in the order of shoulder to shoulder, bust and length are:
S: 18"/46cm, 17"/44cm, 26"/66cm
M: 20"/51cm, 19"/49cm, 27"/69cm
L: 22"/56cm, 21"/54cm, 28"/71cm
Material: 100% soft style cotton
Hand-screen-printed in London, using eco-friendly ink.
This print was especially designed by Paul Noble for Coco Career's 'Art on Fashion' project.
Art on Fashion is celebrating the interdisciplinary activity of creatives, both critically acclaimed emerging talents as well as internationally established artists.
For this special project Coco Career's Boutique (Verena Paloma Jabs) has asked artists and designers to create an image, which is offered as limited edition screen-printed t-shirts.
About Paul Noble:
After completing his degree in Fine Art at Humberside College of Higher Education in 1986, artist Paul Noble moved to London, where he was a founding member of the artist-run gallery City Racing. At City Racing he held his first exhibitions, which consisted mostly of small narrative paintings and drawings suggesting infantile dream-like worlds. Parodying the intense fantastical doodling of teenagers, his paintings, drawings and installations, in which he has invented whole new worlds, marked out a particular territory somewhere between despair and hilarity. Paul is mostly known for Nobson, a series of large scale highly detailed graphite drawings depicting an imaginary vision of a utopian city. Upon closer inspection, the dystopian nature of this imaginary habitat, its institutions such as the Nobspital, and its dysfunctional occupants becomes apparent. Paul described the work as ‘Town planning as self-portraiture', explaining the apparent lack of inhabitants, since the only inhabitant is the artist himself. His more recent solo-shows include the Whitechael Gallery and dot to dot at the Gagosian Gallery in New York. Paul has also rendered his imagery into incredible detailed and beautifully crafted large-scale embroidery and tapestry-pieces.