Cheops' Pyramid 1982 46x58 Huge - Arizona
Earl Carpenter
Original Painting : Oil on Linen/canvas
Size : 35.5x47.5 in | 90x121 cm
Framed : 46x58 in | 117x147 cm
Reduced
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🔥Huge Fabulous Framed Oil on Linen and Canvas - Inquire $$$$$$$
Year1982
Hand SignedLower Right
Condition Excellent
Framed without GlassOriginal Artist Frame, Western Style Weathered
Purchased fromPrivate Collector 2017
Certificate of AuthenticityArt Brokerage
LID149991
Earl Carpenter - United States
Art Brokerage: Earl Carpenter American Artist: Known for breathtaking, panoramic scenes of the Grand Canyon, Earl Carpenter has had reproductions of his work in "Arizona Highways" magazines. He also paints western genre, specializing in Indians and has been an illustrator. Carpenter was born in Long Beach, California and was in the United States Air Force in the 1950s. He then enrolled at the Art Center College of Design in Los Angeles followed by study at the Chouinard Art Institute. Many of his paintings in those days were cloudscapes depicting the beauty he had observed flying airplanes. In 1960, he and his wife, Millie, having set out to explore the country from California, got no further than Arizona, living first in Sedona and later in Phoenix and from 1978 in Flagstaff. In Phoenix, he worked as a technical illustrator for an advertising agency and taught and sold his paintings at the Stable Art Gallery in Scottsdale. But soon he began fine art painting full time, at first in an abstract style, but he found a much wider audience for his realistic work. He began with subject matter focused on Hopi and Navajo Indians butrnbecame depressed over the poverty and living conditions of those people he observed. He decided to turn to a subject that made him feelrnbetter, and that was the Grand Canyon, which he first saw in the 1960s. He is especially challenged by trying to go beyond a photographic rendering of the Canyon to expressing his feelings of awe about it. When he tires of that subject or finds he is repeating himself, he goes to a different area including the Grand Tetons. To capture his landscapes on canvas, he first sketches in oil or watercolor and photographs the cloud formations because they change so rapidly. Listings wanted.