Honolua Store Acrylic Print
by Darice Machel McGuire
$94.00
Product Details
Honolua Store acrylic print by Darice Machel McGuire. Bring your artwork to life with the stylish lines and added depth of an acrylic print. Your image gets printed directly onto the back of a 1/4" thick sheet of clear acrylic. The high gloss of the acrylic sheet complements the rich colors of any image to produce stunning results. Two different mounting options are available, see below.
Design Details
In West Maui there is a little town called Kapalua. It's where the Ritz Carlton Resort is located and the Honolua Store. The store was built in 1929... more
Ships Within
3 - 4 business days
Additional Products
Acrylic Print Tags
Artist's Description
In West Maui there is a little town called Kapalua. It's where the Ritz Carlton Resort is located and the Honolua Store. The store was built in 1929 by pineapple plantation carpenters. It remains a central feature of Kapalua Resort. Not only was it a "company store," stocking goods and merchandise for plantation workers, it served as a town center for village residents. A bulletin board displayed notices of activities and events; pineapple workers could check the times for starting their field shifts and read labor union notices. The bulletin board is still there. I use it to advertise my art and my art school, Art E Studio, wwwart-e-studio.net,
This painting is one of six 11x14 local Maui scenes I've done.
"Copyright 2013, Darice Machel McGuire, all rights reserved"
About Darice Machel McGuire
Darice Machel McGuire lived on the beautiful Island of Maui from 2012 until the Lahaina fire on August 8th, 2023, destroyed her art studio. She and her husband have relocated to Grass Valley, California. They purchased a commercial building to reestablish their art studios. McGuire's Hawaii and California landscape oil and acrylic paintings are gracing the homes and offices of collectors nationally and internationally. McGuire's choice of subject matter comes from her love of nature and all that surrounds her on a daily basis. She paints in large and small formats. Three of the five galleries that represented her work were destroyed by the Lahaina fire. The two remaining galleries are Karen Lei's Gallery in Kahakuloa and Karen Lei's...