Pacific Northwest Coast 3 Piece Framed Canvas

ETSYSET01 00011sq.jpg
etsywa02 00005.jpg
WAIMG_1sm.png
ETSYSET01 00007.jpg
WAIMG_3sm.png
frame mat examples square23.jpg
The Art of Placement krsm.jpg
ETSYSET01 00011sq.jpg
etsywa02 00005.jpg
WAIMG_1sm.png
ETSYSET01 00007.jpg
WAIMG_3sm.png
frame mat examples square23.jpg
The Art of Placement krsm.jpg

Pacific Northwest Coast 3 Piece Framed Canvas

from $400.00
Floating Frame:
Size:
Quantity:
Add To Cart

Cape Flattery, Washington

This listing is for a set of three framed canvas prints of the beautiful and moody Pacific Northwest coast. The sizes shown are for each individual piece. For example: the 20" x 30" size is for each of the three pieces. In total, the artwork would cover approximately a 60" x 30" section of a wall.

Land Acknowledgement
We recognize the unique and enduring relationship that exists between Indigenous people and their traditional territories. This photograph was made on the ancestral homelands of the Makah Tribe.

Floating Framed Canvas
• Archival-grade canvas
• pH neutral and acid-free, so it will not yellow over time
• High-quality wood frame
• Hanging wire installed

Frame Width & Depth
• 0.55” w x 1.69” d (black, natural oak, walnut), 0.55” w x 1.88” d (gold, maple wood), 0.30” w x 2” d (thin natural)

Scene Description
A foggy, Pacific Northwest coastal scene with Cedar and Hemlock tree branches framing the composition. In the center of the photo are two sea stacks with trees growing on top of them and peninsulas that jut out from the left into the Pacific Ocean. The scene has an overall moody vibe from the dark green trees and fog.

About the artist
Kevin Russ was born and raised along California’s Central Coast. He later moved north to Oregon, where he briefly attended college before moving into his 2003 Chevy Blazer to pursue landscape photography full time.

In 2013, early in his landscape work, his photographs drew national attention when The Atlantic described him as “iPhone’s Ansel Adams” a distinction that quickly set his work apart in the emerging world of mobile photography. In the years that followed, Russ expanded into film photography while taking on assignments with major brands including Nat Geo Wild, Icelandair, Nestlé Waters, and Timberland.

Today, his work has settled into a quieter, more reflective rhythm. He spends much of his time in the deserts and mountains of the American West, photographing at a slower pace, in pursuit of capturing the timelessness of the American West.