Go in the Opposite Direction
Day 62 - Encaustic Mixed Media painting measuring 4” x 4”. Artwork is float mounted on 8” x 8” matboard. Custom frame shown not included but available as a separate purchase. See link to frames below.
Buy 3 or more Mini Masterpieces and use Code MINI20 to save $20 at checkout.
Click HERE to add a Custom Frame
Want to see some coordinating pieces with oranges? Take a look at Day 43 and Day 50.
Day 62 - Encaustic Mixed Media painting measuring 4” x 4”. Artwork is float mounted on 8” x 8” matboard. Custom frame shown not included but available as a separate purchase. See link to frames below.
Buy 3 or more Mini Masterpieces and use Code MINI20 to save $20 at checkout.
Click HERE to add a Custom Frame
Want to see some coordinating pieces with oranges? Take a look at Day 43 and Day 50.
Day 62 - Encaustic Mixed Media painting measuring 4” x 4”. Artwork is float mounted on 8” x 8” matboard. Custom frame shown not included but available as a separate purchase. See link to frames below.
Buy 3 or more Mini Masterpieces and use Code MINI20 to save $20 at checkout.
Click HERE to add a Custom Frame
Want to see some coordinating pieces with oranges? Take a look at Day 43 and Day 50.
See the process and inspiration behind the piece!
Dervla Murphy is an Irish touring cyclist and author of adventure travel books for over 40 years.
When Dervla was ten, she received a second-hand men’s push bike and an atlas, and her adventures began. In 1963 she courageously cycled alone from Dunkirk to Delhi. She journeyed through the Afghanistan and Iran, countries in which women still are not considered equal, and at a time of political unrest. “It doesn’t take courage,” she told an interviewer recently. “It takes curiosity.” Dervla wrote a book Full Tilt: Ireland to India With a Bicycle, about her trip.
She followed this with volunteer work helping Tibetan refugees in India and Nepal and trekking with a mule through Ethiopia. She wrote about her travels with Rachel (her daughter) in India, Pakistan, South America, Madagascar and Cameroon.
Dervla has normally travelled alone without luxuries and depending on the hospitality of local people. She has been in dangerous situations. “Choose your country, use guidebooks to identify the areas most frequented by foreigners – and then go in the opposite direction,” says Murphy.
Source: Wikipedia