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Canvas
16 x 12 in ($95)
Black Canvas
White ($135)
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Artist featured in a collection
This is one of many eye-catching images I have happened upon during my years in Paris. I discovered the pair of abandoned leather shoes right outside of the building where I used to live-15eme arrondissement. The shoes represented transformation and exploration, a departure from urban living and thinking. Words cannot convey how timely and moving it was for me to capture such a "coincidental" image. Technical specs: One-of-a-kind and Limited-editions are museum-quality, archival pigment prints on high-end fiber-based papers.They are shipped hand signed, numbered, titled and dated along with accompanying certificate of authenticity. This open-ended series offers more economical images that are printed and shipped unsigned, only from . Thank you~ Baronsky
2010
Giclee on Canvas
16 W x 12 H x 1.25 D in
17.75 W x 13.75 H x 1.25 D in
White
Black Canvas
Yes
Ships in a Box
Typically 5-7 business days for domestic shipments, 10-14 business days for international shipments.
Ships in a box. Art prints are packaged and shipped by our printing partner.
Printing facility in California.
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The sky has become the greatest inspiration for my creations. It is the random quality of light-filled nature that draws me closer and closer to an understanding of how to live...of why we are. Eric ==== Eric Baronsky is of Ukrainian/Polish/French decent. He was born in Paris, France (1965), however, from the age of two he was raised by his single mother in Grenwich Village (New York City). In 1980 the two relocated to Hollywood, California. There, Baronsky attended high school and later university, where he studied film production and music composition, with a minor in philosophy. His mother passed away shortly after receiving his Bachelor of Arts degree in 1986. This marked the beginning of his quest to travel the world in an attempt to better understand the universal nature of being. A couple of years later, he resettled in Los Angeles to pursue his earlier ambitions of filmmaking. There he worked up the industry ranks, eventually becoming a documentary / television commercial Producer and Director. In 1992, however, he returned to France, fueled with a renewed desire to rediscover his family roots and culture. Shortly after arriving, he applied and was accepted at the Conservatoire National de Music in Strasbourg. There, he lived in a picturesque farmhouse along the Rhein River, where he concentrated on studying the works of Wagner and Chopin. This period greatly influenced many of his original compositions, and it continues to do the same for his mostly landscape-inspired, dream-like paintings and photography. Baronsky's psyche later shifted, causing him to revisit the United States. An opportunity to start a design and production firm was presented to him during his stay, and so the planned short trip evolved into a more significant venture. He took the chance to alter his professional music interest and proceeded to grow a highly successful, multi-national creative company that serviced the advertising and theme park industries. The jet-setting pace ended abruptly, however, when a nearly fatal scuba diving accident caused him to reflect on his life's path. In 2006, a sequence of other profound events caused him to take a sabbatical. During this introspective period, he realized an inner need that was greater than achieving the proverbial "American Dream". In 2007 Baronsky returned to Paris.
Artist featured by Saatchi Art in a collection
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