
Joker in the Throne Glass Wall Art || Designer Collection
The Joker sits regally on a baroque carved-wood throne, mossy green hair tumbling past the shoulders while pale white face-paint catches the sidelight, an orange satin shirt and plum-purple tailcoat layered over an olive-green waistcoat and matching jade trousers, ringed hands resting on the gilded armrests against an umber drape, every painted streak caught in baroque-villain register. Joker in the Throne is digital oil painting in baroque-villain register — a court-jester muse caught in plum-and-jade theater.
Behind tempered glass, the plum-and-jade palette keeps its painterly mischief and the painted detail holds its tactile streak, the polished surface giving the figurative tribute a quiet cinematic depth.
A natural fit for rooms that welcome moody, theatrical palette — a study with collector intellect, a media room with statement drama, a man cave with editorial heat. For pop-art lovers, baroque-portrait collectors, and anyone drawn to portraiture with court-jester-muse poetry.
Original: $169.90
-65%$169.90
$59.46Product Information
Product Information
Shipping & Returns
Shipping & Returns
Description
The Joker sits regally on a baroque carved-wood throne, mossy green hair tumbling past the shoulders while pale white face-paint catches the sidelight, an orange satin shirt and plum-purple tailcoat layered over an olive-green waistcoat and matching jade trousers, ringed hands resting on the gilded armrests against an umber drape, every painted streak caught in baroque-villain register. Joker in the Throne is digital oil painting in baroque-villain register — a court-jester muse caught in plum-and-jade theater.
Behind tempered glass, the plum-and-jade palette keeps its painterly mischief and the painted detail holds its tactile streak, the polished surface giving the figurative tribute a quiet cinematic depth.
A natural fit for rooms that welcome moody, theatrical palette — a study with collector intellect, a media room with statement drama, a man cave with editorial heat. For pop-art lovers, baroque-portrait collectors, and anyone drawn to portraiture with court-jester-muse poetry.























