Signed, Limited Edition Print for £29 from Michael
Vaughan's Artballing (£95 Value)
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Signed, Limited Edition Print for £29 from Michael Vaughan's Artballing (£95 Value)
- Individually signed and checked by former England cricket captain
- 62 prints to choose from with cricket or abstract themes
Groupon valid for 1 person, may buy multiple as gifts. Voucher activates Tue 27 Sep 2011 at 8pm. Redeem online at www.artballing.com using Groupon codes. P&P £3.50. Allow 10 working days for delivery.
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The pairing of cricket and art further supports the notion that unlikely pairs can be successful, just like chips and chocolate, hats and foxgloves, and suits and jacket potatoes. Celebrate an unusual match with today's Groupon: £29 for a limited edition artballing print created and signed by Michael Vaughan from Michael Vaughan's Artballing.

Using his trusty cricket bat, an industrial unit, and some paint, England's most successful cricket captain and returner of the Ashes, Michael Vaughan, has pioneered the contemporary movement of artballing. The sporting fan's answer to minimalism, artballing has given cricket followers something to soothe the loss of Vaughan from the England team. The skills on the field have translated to the canvas, and aficionados of art and cricket can be united with a game attitude and a painty thwack.
Collectors and cricketers can invest in a spot of art nouveau with an individually signed, limited edition artballing print. Choosing from 62 prints, each checked and signed by Vaughan, artball buyers will become the owners of a Vaughan with a limited print edition.
How it works:
1. Buy your Groupon
2. We email you the voucher after the deal ends
3. Voucher activates on Tuesday 27 September 2011 at 8pm
4. Go to www.artballing.com
5. Choose artwork and in the checkout, enter your voucher codes
6. Have your credit or debit card ready to pay P&P of £3.50
6. Await delivery
Reviews
Artballing is not widely reviewed yet, however, the Sunday Telegraph Magazine had praise to share for Michael Vaughan’s work.
The artball works fall somewhere between Jackson Pollock's abstract splats and Damien Hirst's Spot Paintings: not as regimented in layout as the latter, yet not as spontaneous as the former.
– Alastair Smart, Sunday Telegraph Magazine, Apr 2009





