The 3 Hares- Contemporary art print on canvas with the ancient symbol. The print is from my original acrylic canvas painting.
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  • The 3 Hares- Contemporary art print on canvas with the ancient symbol. The print is from my original acrylic canvas painting.
  • The Three Hares Symbol, 50 x 70 cm, art ptint on canvas
  • The Three Hares Symbol, 50 x 70 cm, art ptint on canvas
  • The Three Hares Symbol, 50 x 70 cm, art ptint on canvas

The Three Hares Symbol, 50 x 70 cm, art ptint on canvas

€384.20
Tax included

The 3 Hares
Art print on canvas
Vienna, Austria 2020
50 x 75 cm / 19.6 x 27.5 in

ART PRINT on canvas

It has a small painted signature and a protective varnish.

The price includes 13 % value added tax.

This painting is interactive.
When you scan it with the free for download
ARTIVIVE app one can observe a video on it.

Shipping:
The delivery depends on the location.
Pick-ups are possible in the gallery.
I will get in touch with you after the order
for fast delivery and shipping options.





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Products are dispatched within 2-12 days after the payment has arrived.

  Return policy

Artworks without damages can be sent back within 7 days. Services-Gift Vouchers within 5 days.

The THREE HARES motif is a trinity symbol and appears in sacred sites from the Middle and the Far East to the churches of Devon, England, and historical synagogues in Europe. The earliest occurrences appear to be in cave temples in China, dated to the Sui dynasty (6th to 7th centuries). The iconography spread along the Silk Road and was a symbol associated also with Buddhism. While each hare seems to have two ears, the symbol is actually a visual puzzle: a total of three ears connects them in their endless loop. Some believe the hares (wild rabbits) symbolize eternity; others think they stand for fertility. Still, others consider them a representation of the connection between the heavens and the Earth. The original meaning of the three hares motif remains obscure, but it has a cross-cultural significance.

The hare was a happy animal for the Germanic spring goddess Ostara (Eostre) and considered as a fertility symbol.
Even today, the etymological relationship of the word "Easter" with the spring goddess "Ostara" (whose name goes back to "Eostre") is debated.
On clay lamps or mosaics - the motif of the hare can be found on many examples in art and architecture of antiquity. Here the hare/rabbit was considered a symbol of life and rebirth.
The first Easter Bunny legend was documented in the 1500s.
"The first written mention of the Easter Bunny, which hides eggs in the garden comes from 1682 from a scientific work of the medical professor Georg Franck von Franckenau.
In ancient times, it was widely believed that the hare was a hermaphrodite.
The idea that a hare could reproduce without loss of virginity led to an association with the Virgin Mary. It may also have been associated with the Holy Trinity, as in the three hares motif."

Here you can see the video

painting print on canvas

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