The watermark in the lower right corner of the image will not appear on the final print.
Frame
Top Mat
Bottom Mat
Dimensions
Image:
8.00" x 6.50"
Overall:
8.00" x 6.50"
The Spectator Canvas Print
by Donald Maier
Product Details
The Spectator canvas print by Donald Maier. Bring your artwork to life with the texture and depth of a stretched canvas print. Your image gets printed onto one of our premium canvases and then stretched on a wooden frame of 1.5" x 1.5" stretcher bars (gallery wrap) or 5/8" x 5/8" stretcher bars (museum wrap). Your canvas print will be delivered to you "ready to hang" with pre-attached hanging wire, mounting hooks, and nails.
Design Details
This oil won Honorable Mention in a NJ state wide art show at Rutgers University in 1974 titled Emerging Artists. It has the further distinction of... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
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Comments (4)
Artist's Description
This oil won Honorable Mention in a NJ state wide art show at Rutgers University in 1974 titled "Emerging Artists". It has the further distinction of being the only painting stolen from the show. I anyone knows of its whereabouts, please let me know. It has been lost for 36 years. $
About Donald Maier
Donald Maier graduated from the Newark School of Fine and Industrial Arts, in Newark, New Jersey in 1968. He won several state and local show awards in the early seventies, including 1st place in oils at the Garden State Art Center in 1971, 1st place for Watercolor at the Red Bank Festival of Arts in 1972 and an Honorable Mention in the Emerging Artists exhibit at Rutgers University in 1973. He had numerous one-man shows in both New Jersey, California and Georgia and has exhibited in many fine galleries in California, Scottsdale, Arizona, Santa Fe, New Mexico and Georgia. As a young man, Don was inspired by Winslow Homer, and one of his first watercolor trips was to his home state of Maine. He remember waiting for over an hour for the...
$58.00
Donald Maier
Most of my painting have trees in them... many have sold, so yes is the answer to you question. Why, did you come across one in a garage sale or antique store?
Kira Mcnichols
Did you do any paintings of trees that you don't have anymore?
Donald Maier
This is actually at the end of the boardwalk in Avon, NJ, at the beach we called Washington Ave Beach. It was the southern most beach in Avon and "The Specator" was sitting watching the bathers and the boats coming and going into the mouth of the Shark River Inlet that he was facing.
Kip DeVore
Very interesting piece. 'Love the thought behind it -- I take, to be a composite, with a soccer (?) game going on beyond the fence, and the illusion of blocks of "transparent" color.