ABOUT RORSCHACH PRINT SKETCH
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This is an archival art print of watercolor and ink painting / illustration of the Rorschach (Watchmen) Sketch Art with watercolor splashes.
Printed on 100% cotton paper, 310 g/m² Fine Art heavyweight paper with Epson Stylus® Pro printer. Perfect quality!
Suitable for any interior where you need a stylish and elegant touch.
Ready for you to place in a frame of your own choice.
NOTES
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Note: NO FRAME INCLUDED!
Note: The watermark will not appear on the print!
DETAILS
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* Name: Rorschach, Walter Joseph Kovacs
* Size: Any
* Print of watercolor and ink painting / illustration
* The watermark will not appear on the print
* No frame included
* Style: Watercolor, Modern, Abstract, Digital
* Shipping: rolled in a tube
ABOUT RORSCHACH
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Rorschach (born Walter Joseph Kovacs) is a fictional character and an anti-hero in the acclaimed 1986 graphic novel miniseries Watchmen, published by DC Comics. Rorschach was created by writer Alan Moore with artist Dave Gibbons, but as with most of the main characters in the series, he was an analogue for a Charlton Comics character, in this case Steve Ditko's the Question. Moore also modeled Rorschach on Mr. A, another Steve Ditko creation on whom the Question was originally based, and more generally, on ruthless vigilante characters in the tradition of Batman.
While Watchmen has an ensemble cast, many consider Rorschach to be the protagonist as he drives most of the plot forward and serves as the series' narrator. In the beginning of the story, he is introduced as the only masked vigilante to remain active on his own terms and initiative, a criminal outlaw as opposed to other former "superheroes" now covertly employed by the U.S. government. A ruthless crime-fighter, Rorschach believes in moral absolutism—good and evil as pure ends, with no shades of gray—which compels him to seek to punish any evidence of evil at all costs. His mask displays a constantly morphing inkblot based on the ambiguous designs used in Rorschach inkblot tests, with the mask's black and white coloring consistent with his sense and view of morality. This is also how he received his name.