Style1½ inches thick (3.75 cm) Product Details Artist grade canvas, archival inks, wooden stretcher bars, and UVB protective coating
AvailablityUsually ships within five business days. ArtistEmily Colosimo Platinum Member CollectionFineArt
Description Kathmandu Abstract Series were originally created long before Nepal was heavily damaged by the 2015 earthquake that devastated and tore up this great nation.KATHMANDU FIRE represents the people of Nepal. Hardworking, resilience and tenacity are ways to describe perhaps the hardest working people in the world. Nothing stops them from working in the rain, heat or cold. Generations have thrived working their entire lives while themselves languish in poor living conditions. Ethics alone are not enough to bring this country to prosperity. In fact, its become their own worst enemy. These nice people who come from humble beginnings can barely feed themselves. Theyll treat foreign visitors better than their own kind by opening their homes and offering their hospitality to them. They may be nice to strangers; but fight among themselves using blame games to sort their differences. They need to stop barking up the wrong tree; restore their myopic thinking; end their peer jealousies that only bring pleasure on their own failures; and, pull themselves together thinking objectively not subjectively. While Nepal slips backwards with their myopic thinking, technology and richness are changing and advancing the developed world around them. Their is a lot of fire inside the Nepalese people which could be to their advantage. That fuel inside them can be used for better use by coming together in harmony and use their time, money and energy by introducing advanced technology, education and equipment in their community. This may begin to build for a thriving nation thats better equipped to compete with the rest of the world and build healthier living conditions for themselves.
Emily Colosimo, Toronto Member Since July 2012 Artist Statement Emily grew up in a Canadian Italian Family where her mother was a talented seamstress/pattern designer and her father's hobby was redesigning cars. Her dad once envisioned an alternative fuel vehicle over 40 years ago. All of her siblings inherited much of their talents. Her first artwork was a lighthouse drawn when she was 4 years old. From that point on she was destined to become an architect. Sketching, painting and currently digital artwork has become her passive leisure. From Landscape Architect to Advertising Art Director Emily uses her artistic tools to envision her ideas.