‘The sky is the daily bread of the eyes.’Ralph Waldo Emerson The 17th century had witnessed many events of great importance for painting; one of them was establishing landscape as an independent genre. Mutual interplay between land and sky has inspired many Dutch painters, who created images with a more and more lowered vanishing point. In the following centuries this tendency was continued and enriched by influence of Japanese woodcuts. Henry David Thoreau wrote: ‘Thank God men cannot fly, and lay waste the sky as well as the earth.’ How many times we let go of our thoughts and just look into the sky?

| | | | | | | | Coney Island in Fog | | | 61 by 40.6cm. (24.4′ x 16.24′) | | | Fine art photographic print | | | by Martin Amis – more artworks, artist’s CV | | | £ 490 | | | | | | | |
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| | | | | | | | Cloudy Grass | | | 60 by 60cm. (24′ x 24′) | | | Limited Edition Fine Art Giclee Print stretched on Canvas. | | | by Pete Kelly – more artworks, artist’s CV | | | £ 300 | | | | | | | |
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| | | | | | | | Lost No.2 | | | 68 by 53cm. (27.2′ x 21.2′) | | | Fine Art Giclee Print – white mount and white wooden frame. (Unframed image size 30×45). | | | by Neil Seligman – more artworks, artist’s CV | | | £ 450 | | | | | | | |
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