The Corrugated Plain Metal Print
by Jenny Armitage
Product Details
The Corrugated Plain metal print by Jenny Armitage. 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
Visiting the actual battlefield makes many contemporary descriptions clearer of Custer's Last stand clearer. Western plains are deceptive. They... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
Additional Products
Metal Print Tags
Painting Tags
Artist's Description
Visiting the actual battlefield makes many contemporary descriptions clearer of Custer's Last stand clearer. Western plains are deceptive. They often look flat from a distance, but turn out to be steep and hilly. People, houses, factories hide in what looks like an unobstructed view to the horizon in a all directions.
The Littlebighorn is like that. From the ridge you have the illusion that you can see all, but you can't. And the land leading up to the ridge is steep and hard.
But my painting is not of where Custer made his famous last stand. Instead, I painted view from where his Lieutenant Reno was pinned down. Reno retreated up these gulches after meeting the Indians in the valley below. The hills are probably much the same, but the river below snakes through a flat valley and it has moved over time. And of course that fields and ranches now occupying the land came after the battle.
Despite the graves, the markers of where Custer's men fell and...
About Jenny Armitage
Jenny Armitage lives, paints, and draws in Salem Oregon. She's currently riding two horses: impressionist watercolor and surreal ink. Jenny's watercolors are about light and shadow patterns. She's most interested in forest and cityscapes, where the light bounces around creating interesting light patterns. These paintings begin with a pattern of light seen in the real world. Her ink drawings are illustrative of ideas. She has a thought and seeks to translate it to paper. Unlike her watercolors, the image begins with thought, not sight. The result is less painterly and more illustrative. Her recent watercolor goddess series straddles these two ideas. The paintings begin with an idea, but the execution is painterly and perhaps...
$76.00