All Images ©Respective Artists ©The Greenwich Workshop®, Inc.





Blossoms of Change Quartet
by Cassandra Barney

“These paintings are about progression,” says Cassandra Barney, “about moving into something different and evolving. Life is full of these moments of change and the figures in these paintings are striving for something.The quartet is about committing to an action rather than expecting an answer.”

Like the beautiful blossoms surrounding the figures, each painting is different—in fact, the four pieces had originally been intended for separate sale, but when Barney hung the paintings for a recent gallery show, she was amazed at how perfectly they worked together. “I realized that I was exploring some very similar themes as I painted these,” she says,“themes that I think a lot of women—and a lot of men, for that matter—can relate to: sacrifice, growth and striving to be the best possible person you can be.” Rather than the traditional blessings of poetry, dance or music, these extraordinary, elegant muses inspire us to grow, to change and to never give up.

Get to know Cassandra Barney through her portfolio (www.cassandrabarney.com) and her blog (http://churningsandburnings.blogspot.com). Cassandra regularly updates these two dynamic websites with photographs of works in progress, reflections on family life and explorations of the things that inspire her, both as an artist and as a woman.

Greenwich Workshop Fine Giclée Canvas:
limited to 50 each s/n.
A. All That I Have to Give is Yours
19"w x 28"h.
$595
Ask About Availability
B. Theodosia
14"w x 28"h.
$495
Ask About Availability
C. Minerva
14"w x 28"h.
$495
Ask About Availability
D. Violetta
19"w x 28"h.
$595
Ask About Availability





duck tape...

by Will Bullas

Once in a while, in today’s serious, stressful world, it’s important to stop, take a rest … and find yourself
face-to-face with the most endearing, enduring duck the world has ever known.Will Bullas’ world-famous painting
duck tape… is available as an Anniversary Edition Fine Art Giclée Canvas.The Greenwich Workshop is thrilled to offer this legendary monument to silliness at three times its original size—that’s three times the fun, three times the absurdity and three times the laughs.

The bigger
duck tape… gets, the funnier it gets, but you’ll have to see it to believe it. Because our Greenwich Workshop Fine Art Anniversary Editions are produced on canvas, there’s no need to hide them behind glass, which is ideal—nothing should come between you and your duck.This edition is sure to sell out quickly, so be sure to contact your preferred dealer to bring home some duck tape… of your very own today.

Anniversary Edition™
Greenwich Workshop Fine Art Giclée Canvas:

Edition not to exceed 250 s/n.
16"w x 29"h.
$495
Ask About Availability




Eyes of Warning

by Simon Combes

Simon Combes is best known for his paintings of African wildlife, but his deepest passion was the great cats of the world. In 1994 Combes, along with Greenwich Workshop founder Dave Usher, circled the globe to find and paint ten of the world’s most magnificent felines. The jaguar of South America proved to be the most elusive of the collection and the resulting portrait became one of Combes’most celebrated works.

“I spent time with Reina, a thirteen-year-old female jaguar, at a 125,000-acre ranch in Venezuela called Hato El Frio where wildlife is protected,” wrote Simon Combes in his journal of the trip. “Previously, I had been concerned about how to show in my paintings the difference between jaguar and leopard. Having seen Reina, I will never forget. A jaguar is a bigger and more thickset animal, with powerful legs and a heavy head and jaw. Her coat was very short, shiny and a rich russet-gold that made her invisible in dappled sunlight, only ten yards away. The spots are bold and those on the flanks are large rough circles with several black dots inside—very different from a leopard’s rosettes.”

MasterWork™
Greenwich Workshop Fine Art
Anniversary Edition™ Giclée Canvas:
Edition not to exceed 125 and numbered.
37"w x 28"h (unstretched).
$1250
Ask About Availability




Eagle's Gift

by Judy Larson™

“Native American legends have always intrigued me,” says Judy Larson, “especially those involving talking animals. So it was difficult not to be enthralled by one such story, a Cheyenne legend in which an eagle is trapped in a dead elk’s antlers. After asking for help from a warrior who is out hunting, he is set free. The eagle is so grateful that his life has been saved that before flying away, he tells the man to go to the other side of a hill and to look below. There the warrior sees his reward, a beautiful stallion covered with black and white spots exactly like an eagle’s feathers.”

Spotted eagle feathers, highly prized by Native Americans, come only from the tail section of immature golden eagles. In
Eagle’s Gift, Judy has replicated the eagle feather pattern on the horse’s coat and has hidden therein an eagle or two.

Greenwich Workshop Fine Art Giclée Canvas:
limited to 200 s/n.
18"w x 24"h.
$650
Ask About Availability




Pueblo Street Market, 1920s

by Z. S. Liang

Z. S. Liang, born in China and raised in a family of artists, was first published at age 6 in a children’s magazine. His art education spanned two continents, beginning at the Central Academy of Fine Art in Beijing and continuing at the Massachusetts College of Art and Boston University. Liang encountered his first great inspiration in this country while studying and painting the Wampanoag Indians in Plymouth, Massachusetts. He began to focus his painting primarily on Native American cultures and their traditional way of life. Liang's passion for the Indians as a people, coupled with his emphasis on historical accuracy, imbues his portraits of them with strength and truth.

Liang’s inspiration for
Pueblo Street Market, 1920s was the Beale Wagon Road across New Mexico and Arizona which was opened to automobile traffic in 1926 and renamed the National Trails Highway Route 66. Entrepreneur Fred Harvey, capitalizing on the newly available roadways, offered “Indian Detours” of the Southwest.One of the most popular packages was a trip in a Packard touring car (or “Harveycar”) into the pueblos, where the tourists could enjoy the landscape and architecture and shop in the markets.The original painting was Liang’s entry in the prestigious, by-invitation-only Masters of the American West Fine Art Exhibition and Sale.

MasterWork™
Greenwich Workshop Fine Art Giclée Canvas:

limited to 35 s/n.
50"w x 36"h (unstretched).
$2450
Ask About Availability




The Taunt

by Frank C. McCarthy

In his long and storied career, Frank McCarthy earned renown for many things—his attention to detail, his insistence on historical accuracy, his first-rate storytelling ability—but none were more celebrated than his eye for design. “The Dean of Western Action,” as he came to be known, brought from his early days as a commercial illustrator an understanding of visual design that makes his action-packed paintings the finest of their type.

In
The Taunt, a band of Plains warriors races across the prairie with their opponents in hot pursuit. The frenetic action of the story is made infinitely more exciting by McCarthy’s compelling design, which leads the viewer’s eye through the painting like a hawk tracking a hare. Any serious collector of Western art cannot consider their collection complete if it does not contain a McCarthy, who is truly an original American master!

Greenwich Workshop Fine Art Giclée Canvas:
limited to 75 numbered.
14"w x 28"h.
$695
Ask About Availability





Chinatown Market, San Francisco, 1878

by Mian Situ

“This is a typical Chinese market in old Chinatown, right here in America. In a market like this, one could find the ingredients for the same food they ate in China and prepare it in exactly the same way,” says artist Mian Situ.“The market looked very similar to those in my childhood hometown in Southern China, where I was often sent on errands, so this painting was inspired by both personal childhood memories and late-19th century photographs of San Francisco.

There’s no better time than right now to begin collecting Mian Situ’s Fine Art Limited Editions. Art of the West magazine recently designated Situ one of the “8 True Masters” of today’s Western art world.The original painting of
Chinatown Market, San Francisco, 1878 sold for $179,200 at the 2007 Jackson Hole Art Auction, nearly $90,000 above the highest estimated price.This exquisite Fine Art Limited Edition, signed by Mian Situ, and in an edition of only 50, is sure to quickly disappear.

Greenwich Workshop Fine Art Giclée Canvas:
limited to 50 s/n.
36"w x 27"h.
$1375
Ask About Availability





Grandfather Prays to Sun

by Howard Terpning®

“Many years ago, I camped overnight about a hundred feet from this spot,” says Howard Terpning. “As I recall, it is in an area of the Ruby Mountains in Montana, which was part of the vast region that was home to the Blackfoot people.

Natosi (sun) was the dominant power in their lives and they believed that Sun gave life-giving energy to all things. I imagined that early one morning as Sun’s rays swept across the land, this old man dismounted from his pony. He held up his sacred eagle-wing fan and his pipe and prayed to Sun as his two warrior grandsons looked on with deep respect for their grandfather and the traditions he embodied.

“The story in a painting like this is in the faces of the figures. I wanted to capture a reverence in the faces of these young men for their grandfather and the only way to do that is to make a large enough canvas that your figures can be large. With a large format you can introduce more drama, you can enter more into the play of light and shadow on the figures and you can achieve a more dramatic effect than you would on a smaller canvas.”

Terpning’s passion for the story of the Native American, combined with his formidable talent as a painter, makes each of his Fine Art Limited Editions a unique and commanding treasure for your home or office.

MasterWork™
Greenwich Workshop Fine Art Giclée Canvas:

limited to 275 s/n.
48"w x 33"h (unstretched).
$1950
Ask About Availability