Frame
Top Mat
Bottom Mat
Dimensions
Image:
10.00" x 7.50"
Overall:
10.00" x 7.50"
Empire Period Piano 1820 Wood Print
by Ira Shander
Product Details
Empire Period Piano 1820 wood print by Ira Shander. Bring your artwork to life with the texture and added depth of a wood print. Your image gets printed directly onto a sheet of 3/4" thick maple wood. There are D-clips on the back of the print for mounting it to your wall using mounting hooks and nails (included).
Design Details
Joseph Loud, Philadelphia piano maker built this model in 1820.
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
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Comments (7)
Artist's Description
Joseph Loud, Philadelphia piano maker built this model in 1820.
About Ira Shander
Hello, and thank-you for taking time to visit my web site. As a long time illustrator specializing in pen and ink, photography developed as a means for me to become expressive in color. My specialty as a line artist has always been history and architecture. I've created series for major companies, publishers, and cultural institutions throughout the United States. Take time to visit some of my galleries. I welcome commissions such as house portraits and hobby related subject matter. Again, take a peek at the galleries to get a better idea. I hope that you enjoy both means of expression and visit often. Thanks, Ira Shander
$56.00
Marcia Colelli
Outstanding image and beautiful work. L
Derrick Neill
Liked & Faved, Ira!
Kathryn Jones
Beautiful! How I wish that I could get my hands on that keyboard!
Ira Shander replied:
Kathryn, I have heard a number of recordings made on pianos of this period. The music sounds different. Somewhat more transparent. Beethoven had and destroyed many pianos. Maybe he would have enjoyed a modern Steinway or Bosendorfer. Maybe the 32 piano sonatas would have been composed differently. We'll never now. He bought an English Broadwood which was shipped from London to Italy. Then shlepped over the Alps to Vienna. It needed some work when it arrived. Later the piano wound up in the hands of Franz Liszt. And now is in the museum in Budapest. These early pianos have to my ears an almost etherial sound to them. Or maybe I'm just romanticizing. English musician, Christopher Hogwood, who passed away in 2015 was a great proponent of using original instruments. What a difference. He understood, through great scholarship, how composers and players understood things to sound.
Ira Shander
Thank-you Jeff.
Jeff Swan
Great image Ira
Ira Shander
Thank-you Meg. If only I could play it.
Meg Shearer
Beautiful!