Product Description
You don't have to break the bank in order to enjoy a gallery wall hung salon-style with impressionist canvas artwork. Tali’s vibrant art comes to life with the texture and depth of a stretched custom canvas print. Even a small image or work of art can become a wall art canvas centerpiece in any room décor. Whether you choose a large canvas print or multiple canvases to brighten your walls, you can be sure that your space will sing will creative energy and joy.
There is no need for a framed print when choosing your unique wall décor. Talya Johnson’s colorful canvas art can be mirrored onto the canvas cradle for a contemporary gallery wrap design. Add a splash of color to your living room, home office, or any DIY interior design project With a beautiful canvas print.
Tali ensures her use of saturated color comes through with archival inks printing to premium mat or glossy canvas then stretched on a wooden frame of 1.5" x 1.5" stretcher bars. Your canvas wall art will be delivered to you "ready to hang" with pre-attached hanging wire, mounting hooks, and nails.
For a personalized canvas print enhanced by having Tali hand-paint on top of the printed canvas, please inquire by filling out our contact form.
September is my favorite time of year in Alaska. Because the seasons change here so quickly all the vegetation dresses in their Sunday best before taking their long winter's rest. Scarlet, yellows, the deepest violets, and even splashes of fireweed crimson in the undergrowth flood the senses. My attempt with this painting was to push the traditional limited palette of red, yellow and blue to it's full capacity. Using the palette knife enabled me to push the colors without loosing their inherent identity and saturation in the foreground. I slowly allowed the blue-grays to dominate as the mountains continued to recede into the hazy sky. As I painted, I was struck by the metaphor and symbolism of the word "fall". How clear everything was in the present where I was, and how hazy it was in the distant mountains, where I will someday go. A brief parting of the sky reassured me that adventures indeed could be found "further up, and further in."