The Brothers Karamazov Glass Wall Art
A Brothers-Karamazov pop-poster stands in vertical cinematic format — a stylized retro-graphic illustration of the four Karamazov brothers' faces (with one tear-streaked young face at the centre) in saffron, scarlet and emerald with onion-domed cathedrals and "THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV / DOSTOEVSKY" typography in vintage banner format.
The composition reads as 60s pop book-cover illustration: the four brothers face front in stylized geometric ornament, the central tear underlines literary tragedy, and the onion-domed Russian cathedrals frame the masthead with cultural specificity. The piece sits between mid-century Saul-Bass graphic-design and contemporary literary-poster reissue.
Tempered glass deepens the saturated colors and pushes the saffron-and-scarlet faces into reflective punch that paper print cannot match. Hung in a designer literary-cafe reception, a writer's-retreat study, a heritage library or a book-club lounge, this Karamazov cinematography brings literary-pop drama and Dostoevsky-tribute sophistication into a residential wall.
Original: $159.90
-65%$159.90
$55.96








Description
A Brothers-Karamazov pop-poster stands in vertical cinematic format — a stylized retro-graphic illustration of the four Karamazov brothers' faces (with one tear-streaked young face at the centre) in saffron, scarlet and emerald with onion-domed cathedrals and "THE BROTHERS KARAMAZOV / DOSTOEVSKY" typography in vintage banner format.
The composition reads as 60s pop book-cover illustration: the four brothers face front in stylized geometric ornament, the central tear underlines literary tragedy, and the onion-domed Russian cathedrals frame the masthead with cultural specificity. The piece sits between mid-century Saul-Bass graphic-design and contemporary literary-poster reissue.
Tempered glass deepens the saturated colors and pushes the saffron-and-scarlet faces into reflective punch that paper print cannot match. Hung in a designer literary-cafe reception, a writer's-retreat study, a heritage library or a book-club lounge, this Karamazov cinematography brings literary-pop drama and Dostoevsky-tribute sophistication into a residential wall.
























