Customer Reviews
Customer Reviews - Eagle Eye View of 42nd Street in New...
77 Reviews
5 out of 5 stars
Eagle Eye View of 42nd Street in New York City
$25.99
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I would probably not use this for a bedroom or living room as it is printed plastic canvas. I prefer to hang real oils or acrylics in those rooms. This material is good for a photograph but I wouldn't recommend for a painting as it needs to be more matte or grainy finish to look like a painting.
The painting is on a thin sheet of canvas. The canvas is stapled on a wooden frame that seems to be of very good quality and the canvas wraps around the frame for a very good effect of warped space-reality. The actual picture is just simply beautiful. I have nothing bad to say about this painting but I am not going to discuss it any further because everyone can see it at Amazon's page and decide whether you like it or not. Just keep in mind that this is a 'mass' print, not a limited edition.
This is a 5 stars for the quality of the frame and canvas and the, believe it or not, vibrant black, white and shades of grey in-between.
The overall impression is one of serenity, peace, and isolation. The predominate color is blue, with a few sea greens and sand colors mixed in. The splash of color produced by the balloons, offset right of center, brings in kaleidoscopic warm tones, to balance all the cool colors. Actually, the heart balloon smacks of sentimentality, its lighthearted whimsy is smack dab in the middle of the painting. So that's your central image, the key to the piece's meaning. There's some fun optical issues with the balloons. Notice the white balloon on the bottom, how it merges with the clouds behind it? You could almost believe that the balloons represent an attempt to tie together the wild forces of the air element in nature, to man's technological drive. (The bike is man's technology in this scene.) On a formal level, I enjoy the interplay of straight lines, with the horizon, the edge of the beach, against the circular shapes found in the bike's wheels, and the balloons. Another aspect of the piece, can be discovered if you ask yourself, "What is the story behind the scene?" Okay, we have a bouquet of balloons, instead of flowers, on delivery to be gifted to a loved one. Carefree and cute, the balloons await the moment of gift giving. However, where is the delivery person, who should be riding the bike? How would you see this painting, if the bike were being driven? Action, destination, intent, would be shown. Instead, the bike is parked, the balloons almost attempt to escape and merge with the eternity of the sky behind them. Has the decision to give the balloons been avoided? Maybe the balloons were given to the bike owner, and are on a new journey back home. Without a tangible objective informing the images of gift and transportation, all the symbols are open ended, again placing the burden of completion on the viewer. Because the truth is this---the balloons are being given to you, the viewer. The bike driver has walked away. His role in the tale is completed. Its a circular story, like the circles of the bike tires, and balloons. It all goes round. With little else happening within the minimalistic scenery to provide clues for interpretation, you can only comment on what presents. The escaping heart balloon, is almost ominous in its portent. Why would the heart escape from its mated heart balloon, still within the balloon bouquet? Would the two hearts be sundered by the forces of eternity, perhaps even death? I will say no more.
Its a well constructed piece of art. Heavy one and a half inch stretchers, wrap the image around them. The piece doesn't require a frame. If you still wish a frame, I'd go with something very thin, like black wood strips around the end. Stay away from chrome or brass, it'd cheapen the piece. With all the cool, neutral earth tones, I'd stay dark and neutral with a frame. The photograph was printed on good quality canvas. Hangers are included inside the shipping material surrounding the picture. If you examine the wrap around image on the edges, you discover this painting was seriously cropped. In the foreground, the bike's tires are reflected in a puddle of water. Also, by cropping the painting like this, you cant see the artist's signature. I doubt these considerations mattered to the manufacturer. Maybe they don't matter to you either. Most people buy art like this, because it matches the couch, or goes with the rug. Decorative considerations matter, however, this piece has more happening than mere decoration. Art brings you beneath the surface of things, if you let it.
I was provided a free painting in exchange for my honest and heartfelt review.
The painting is stretched on a wooden frame. The canvas overlaps the edges. Three small screws and a plate to hang the painting are included. It comes well packaged and bubble wrapped too. I was offered one from a range of prints by the maker and I chose this one. I liked the construction of this and the way the canvas over the frame gives a different style to the dimension, too.
The whole canvas is gallery wrapped which means you don't need to frame it; it's ready to place on any wall with a pop of color that is on true canvas so it looks like a painting from far away but up-close it looks like a photograph printed gallery-style on canvas.
Want to become an artist? You can even purchase prints such as this in oder to paint over the subject in actual paint, much like paint by numbers, in oil.
This subject sits somewhere between looking very vintage but carries over to a modern vibe--a bike on the beach is timeless so it's a painting that will carry over through any decor.