Frame
Top Mat
Bottom Mat
Dimensions
Image:
6.50" x 10.00"
Mat Border:
2.00"
Frame Width:
0.88"
Overall:
12.00" x 15.50"
Ryman steps back in time Framed Print
by Glenn DiPaola
Product Details
Ryman steps back in time framed print by Glenn DiPaola. Bring your print to life with hundreds of different frame and mat combinations. Our framed prints are assembled, packaged, and shipped by our expert framing staff and delivered "ready to hang" with pre-attached hanging wire, mounting hooks, and nails.
Design Details
This is one of the wonderful stairways leading to the balcony of the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee. The Ryman, used for Grand Ole Opry... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
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Comments (9)
Artist's Description
This is one of the wonderful stairways leading to the balcony of the Ryman Auditorium in Nashville, Tennessee. The Ryman, used for Grand Ole Opry broadcasts from 1943 until 1974, is also called "The Mother Church of Country Music".
Outside the gothic window on the back wall you can see a building with black stripes on the fae. Those stripes represent the black keys of a keyboard, and it is The Country Music Hall of Fame.
Here are some facts about the Ryman courtesy of Wikipedia: The auditorium first opened as the Union Gospel Tabernacle in 1892. It was built by Thomas Ryman (1843 -1904), a riverboat captain and Nashville businessman who owned several saloons. Ryman conceived of the auditorium as a tabernacle for the influential revivalist Samuel Porter Jones. After Ryman's death, the Tabernacle was renamed Ryman Auditorium in his honor. Architect Hugh Cathcart Thompson designed the auditorium.
About Glenn DiPaola
I attended the University of Rhode Island where I studied photography under Bart Parker. I graduated with a BFA in fine art photography and a minor in communications. College was always b&w work, hand-processed in the dark room, using many different cameras. It was great fun. After college I worked in the photo-finishing business for many years as well as doing commercial photography. In the 80's I started to shoot only color for my artwork and never returned to the world of black & white - until 2014. I started converting my color digital images to black and white whenever I saw them as intended for bw. I believe the eye you started with does not go away. With my newest Fujifilm digital cameras, I am shooting for b&w and...
$82.00
Jeff Brassard
superb!
Glenn DiPaola replied:
Thank you Jeff!
Ella Kaye Dickey
wonderful capture; details, shapes and vertical lines; l/f/t
Fiona Kennard
You have such a wonderful eye! Love the view from the window. Excellent... l/f
Glenn DiPaola replied:
Thanks very much Fiona. Good music is played here too. Maybe one day I'll hear it for myself.
Sandi Mikuse
Hi Glenn....this is just great...I love how your eye follows the railing to the back window and then leaves the building and rests on the scene outside! Excellent photography my friend! L/F
Glenn DiPaola replied:
Thanks Sandi. This is one of my favorites from the Ryman. I liked it in color but I liked it more in bw.
Lucinda Walter
The light here is so beautiful. Love how you can see the building through the window. Fabulous work! v/f
Minding My Visions
Lovely image! Great B&W nicely done! L/F
Ella Kaye
this is a marvelous capture and black and white presentation
Glenn DiPaola replied:
Thanks Ella. It's one of my favorites from my Nashville work - but not until I converted it to bw.