Canvas Fit - Alberto Ricardo - Armadur Tronos de Guerra y Glamour: Master Chief, Lara Crof





Catawiki Buyer Protection
Your payment’s safe with us until you receive your object.View details
Trustpilot 4.4 | 122986 reviews
Rated Excellent on Trustpilot.
Canvas Fit - Alberto Ricardo presents Armadur Tronos de Guerra y Glamour: Master Chief, Lara Croft, a hand-signed limited edition giclée on professional cotton canvas, 60 x 40 cm per panel (5 cm depth) diptych, created in Spain in 2023 and sold directly by the artist (edition 3/5).
Description from the seller
Artwork created on professional canvas using the giclée printing technique on canvas. Digital art using contemporary media and AI.
Artwork by the artist Canvas Fit-Alberto Ricardo created using Giclée print technique on high-quality professional canvas, 100% cotton, highly resistant to handling and external agents, from the Eco Canvas Roma Glossy brand, satin finish.
We guarantee a durable product with visual quality.
Dimension of the diptych: 60 x 40 cm each panel with 5 cm depth.
Limited edition 3/5
On the back of the piece, you will find the details about the work.
The shipment will be made through United Parcel Service (UPS) for Spain and Europe, and through Fedex for the rest of the world.
The work will be rolled and protected with several layers of packaging, bubble nylon, and placed in a sturdy tube.
This 40 x 60 cm giclée diptych on panel features two of the most iconic figures in gaming culture face to face in a composition that blends epic with style. The image shows, on the left, the imposing Master Chief, a symbol of the Halo universe, and on the right, a modern and fierce version of Lara Croft, the heroine of Tomb Raider, both figures transfigured by a luxurious aesthetic that combines power, fashion, and confrontation. Sitting — literally or symbolically — on Louis Vuitton thrones, their presences compel us to ask: can war be elegant? can action be dressed in haute couture?
The left panel presents us with Master Chief as a statue of a living war. His matte green armor, instantly recognizable, has not lost its military functionality, but is now framed by an elegant background with cream and red tones sprinkled with LV patterns. This is not a space battlefield, but a ceremonial room where the soldier is revered as an icon. Standing tall, upright, firm, Master Chief no longer just fights: he also represents. He is the totem of a digital era that elevates the warrior to the category of an absolute visual symbol.
Facing her, Lara Croft, seated on a throne upholstered in red velvet and gold, wields two pistols with a mix of elegance and defiance. Her outfit, a fusion of classic and modern — white top, leather gloves, shiny pants — is enhanced by an attitude that doesn't need armor to intimidate. With her hair tied back, a direct and confident gaze, and a background decorated with the Louis Vuitton pattern, this version of Lara is not just a tomb raider: she is an urban empress who masters both combat and style.
The contrast between the two is magnetic: one, covered in plates and technology, a futuristic myth forged in steel; the other, with uncovered skin and a piercing gaze, an emblem of the agile body and instinctive intelligence. Yet, they are found in the same aesthetic universe. A place where video game heroes no longer belong exclusively to screens but have been elevated to collectible pieces, works of pop art worthy of a museum or a contemporary penthouse.
The giclée technique enhances this visual narrative: every shadow, every metallic reflection, every strand of hair has been carefully rendered to make the composition breathe life and luxury. Here, war is not shouted, it is posed. Rebellion does not explode, it is contemplated.
This diptych is ultimately a statement: in the modern imagination, the boundary between the digital and the decorative has been broken. Master Chief and Lara Croft are no longer just playable characters; they are emblems of stylized power, mythological figures of the visual consumption era. And on this shared throne, both reign.
Artwork created on professional canvas using the giclée printing technique on canvas. Digital art using contemporary media and AI.
Artwork by the artist Canvas Fit-Alberto Ricardo created using Giclée print technique on high-quality professional canvas, 100% cotton, highly resistant to handling and external agents, from the Eco Canvas Roma Glossy brand, satin finish.
We guarantee a durable product with visual quality.
Dimension of the diptych: 60 x 40 cm each panel with 5 cm depth.
Limited edition 3/5
On the back of the piece, you will find the details about the work.
The shipment will be made through United Parcel Service (UPS) for Spain and Europe, and through Fedex for the rest of the world.
The work will be rolled and protected with several layers of packaging, bubble nylon, and placed in a sturdy tube.
This 40 x 60 cm giclée diptych on panel features two of the most iconic figures in gaming culture face to face in a composition that blends epic with style. The image shows, on the left, the imposing Master Chief, a symbol of the Halo universe, and on the right, a modern and fierce version of Lara Croft, the heroine of Tomb Raider, both figures transfigured by a luxurious aesthetic that combines power, fashion, and confrontation. Sitting — literally or symbolically — on Louis Vuitton thrones, their presences compel us to ask: can war be elegant? can action be dressed in haute couture?
The left panel presents us with Master Chief as a statue of a living war. His matte green armor, instantly recognizable, has not lost its military functionality, but is now framed by an elegant background with cream and red tones sprinkled with LV patterns. This is not a space battlefield, but a ceremonial room where the soldier is revered as an icon. Standing tall, upright, firm, Master Chief no longer just fights: he also represents. He is the totem of a digital era that elevates the warrior to the category of an absolute visual symbol.
Facing her, Lara Croft, seated on a throne upholstered in red velvet and gold, wields two pistols with a mix of elegance and defiance. Her outfit, a fusion of classic and modern — white top, leather gloves, shiny pants — is enhanced by an attitude that doesn't need armor to intimidate. With her hair tied back, a direct and confident gaze, and a background decorated with the Louis Vuitton pattern, this version of Lara is not just a tomb raider: she is an urban empress who masters both combat and style.
The contrast between the two is magnetic: one, covered in plates and technology, a futuristic myth forged in steel; the other, with uncovered skin and a piercing gaze, an emblem of the agile body and instinctive intelligence. Yet, they are found in the same aesthetic universe. A place where video game heroes no longer belong exclusively to screens but have been elevated to collectible pieces, works of pop art worthy of a museum or a contemporary penthouse.
The giclée technique enhances this visual narrative: every shadow, every metallic reflection, every strand of hair has been carefully rendered to make the composition breathe life and luxury. Here, war is not shouted, it is posed. Rebellion does not explode, it is contemplated.
This diptych is ultimately a statement: in the modern imagination, the boundary between the digital and the decorative has been broken. Master Chief and Lara Croft are no longer just playable characters; they are emblems of stylized power, mythological figures of the visual consumption era. And on this shared throne, both reign.

