Boundary Series VIII Metal Print
by Thomas Stead
Product Details
Boundary Series VIII metal print by Thomas Stead. 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
This is a complex painting about the seeing and knowing boundary. We look and our brains fill in the details to complete our perception. It took over... more
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3 - 4 business days
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Comments (1)
Artist's Description
This is a complex painting about the seeing and knowing boundary. We look and our brains fill in the details to complete our perception. It took over 320 hours to complete and is loaded with detail.
About Thomas Stead
My family owned a technical illustration firm so I spent part of my youth observing illustrators produce impossibly complicated projects for Fortune 500 clients. The advantage of my exposure to the profession was simply that I knew the seemingly impossible could be done and that it required an unbelievable work ethic to accomplish.I was not that interested in an illustration career, but I loved to paint. I was fortunate enough to be accepted to a BFA program and then to an MFA degree program in painting. I have had highly divergent influences. After teaching for several years for Ohio U I wrote the art degrees at Shawnee State University and became their first department chair before retiring from FT teaching in 2005. I moved to...
$71.00
Barbara Keith
very unique and very cool.. you must have the patience of a saint..
Thomas Stead replied:
Bless you. I do use a grid app on the iPad (CopyIt) but when there are multiple photos to work from I use Adobe ProCreate on my iPad. I drop in a photo of the painting as it exists then use the Apple Pencil to draw in a layer to see if it works. Sometimes there are several tries (each on its own layer so I can switch them off or on). It saves a lot of time by eliminating the mistakes before they get into paint.