Frame
Top Mat
Bottom Mat
Dimensions
Image:
8.00" x 6.50"
Overall:
8.00" x 6.50"
Tree Number 1 Canvas Print
by Peter Cutler
$78.00
Product Details
Tree Number 1 canvas print by Peter Cutler. Bring your artwork to life with the texture and depth of a stretched canvas print. Your image gets printed onto one of our premium canvases and then stretched on a wooden frame of 1.5" x 1.5" stretcher bars (gallery wrap) or 5/8" x 5/8" stretcher bars (museum wrap). Your canvas print will be delivered to you "ready to hang" with pre-attached hanging wire, mounting hooks, and nails.
Design Details
Trees can be our spiritual teachers. And this one shows how Light and Love creates, nourishes and heals all life.
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
Additional Products
Canvas Print Tags
Photograph Tags
Comments (7)
Artist's Description
Trees can be our spiritual teachers. And this one shows how Light and Love creates, nourishes and heals all life.
About Peter Cutler
Peter Cutler is an internationally acclaimed artist, photographer and film director. At the young age of 20, he won Nikon Cameras prestigious international photography contest. Shows at leading galleries and art and photography magazines soon followed. Over the next 40 years he developed a successful career as a leading commercial artist, photographer and film director, winning over 150 international awards. After 20 years of meditation and spiritual practice, a profound spiritual awakening led him to leave the world of commercial art behind, become a Zen monk and devote his life to his newly discovered gift of healing and manifesting Spirit through art. As he readily acknowledges, this art flows through him, not from him. The art is...
Elizabeth Tillar
Gorgeous image! I love the colors, sun rays, midnight blue background l/f
Dominique De Leeuw
fantastic picture!
Lucinda Walter
Congratulations! Your beautiful image is featured on the FAA Group - One Tree Not Trees l/f
Peter Cutler
Hi Neil, don't know. Maybe not enough sun. Or maybe simply a gift for this photographer. :)
Neil McBride
I'm loving the asymmetry of this image. What happened to the leaves on the right?