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Great Plains Art Metal Print featuring the painting School On The Hill by Scott Kirby

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School On The Hill Metal Print

Scott Kirby

by Scott Kirby

Small Image

$101.00

Product Details

School On The Hill metal print by Scott Kirby.   Bring your artwork to life with the stylish lines and added depth of a metal print. Your image gets printed directly onto a sheet of 1/16" thick aluminum. The aluminum sheet is offset from the wall by a 3/4" thick wooden frame which is attached to the back. The high gloss of the aluminum sheet complements the rich colors of any image to produce stunning results.

Design Details

This work is one of many inspired by real and imagined abandoned schools and skies of the high plains. Watercolor is the medium.

Ships Within

3 - 4 business days

Additional Products

School On The Hill Painting by Scott Kirby

Painting

School On The Hill Canvas Print

Canvas Print

School On The Hill Framed Print

Framed Print

School On The Hill Art Print

Art Print

School On The Hill Poster

Poster

School On The Hill Metal Print

Metal Print

School On The Hill Acrylic Print

Acrylic Print

School On The Hill Wood Print

Wood Print

School On The Hill Greeting Card

Greeting Card

Metal Print Tags

metal prints watercolor metal prints

Painting Tags

paintings watercolor paintings

Comments (5)

Scott Pellegrin

Scott Pellegrin

Congrats on your recent sale!!

Gary F Richards

Gary F Richards

Congratulations on your sale of this wonderful artwork! Fl

Gary F Richards

Gary F Richards

Excellent capture and artwork! Fl

Jeff Brassard

Jeff Brassard

Congratulations!!!

Ethos Lambousa

Ethos Lambousa

excellent piece

Artist's Description

This work is one of many inspired by real and imagined abandoned schools and skies of the high plains. Watercolor is the medium.

About Scott Kirby

Scott Kirby

Visions of the Great Plains consists of drawings and watercolor paintings inspired by the American Great Plains, by Scott Kirby. Referred to as an accidental artist by Sandpoint Magazine, Kirby began painting in 2005, after 9 months of drawing with dual-tip brush pens. Although the attempts to capture these mostly imagined visions are quite intentional, the origins of Kirby's transition from music to art was, in a way, accidental, and unexpected. While drawing with his daughter Sara one afternoon, Kirby was suddenly compelled to continue into the night and following days, being bombarded by mental images which demanded expression. Weeks turned into months, and drawing turned into painting, all scenes rooted in a long relationship with...

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