Product Description
Insulated Sublimatable Cooler Bag with Adjustable Shoulder Strap, size 8 1/2" x 6" x 6"
Buy The Moonlight Party Cooler Bag print by artist Mark Maguire available at Artist.com. Check out the Cooler Bag Art Print collections available at Artist.com.
After the party they drove to the sea. There was a full moon and it laid a shining silver cover upon the water. The shoreline was lit up and only the shadows and the figure of Lesley emerging from the water, were visible. She was calling to him from the water, imploring him to join her. He was turning this over in his mind from the car - he knew red dress was clinging to her although he could not see this... Such a night was too good to waste. He would preserve it, lay it down for the years ahead until it had matured, and savour it when it was gone. Such was the nature of fine moments.
About Mark Maguire
I was born in Liverpool and was educated at the University of Manchester, Swansea University and the Polytechnic of Wales where I studied History, Philosophy and Intellectual and Art History (MA). I have lived and worked in Ireland, Germany, Holland and the UK as a barman, labourer, soldier, Aircraft sealer, Trade Marks Examiner, Ministerial Policy Adviser in Trade & Industry (London), Head of International Relations at the Welsh Office and Principal Private Secretary to the Presiding Officer at the National Assembly for Wales.
I left the Civil Service in 2005 and dedicated myself to art and writing. My large, vibrant and luminous paintings are metaphysical in approach and, as with my writing, personal and intense. They frequently convey contemporary urban realism in a ruined, isolated or detached landscape. The figures in them are always captive watchers of their environment or circumstances, trapped by their inability to communicate. I call these works "narrative" because what is important in the paintings is what happens before or after the moment depicted - the viewer must move beyond the canvas to ascertain this. My smaller paintings are "etudes", conceived as intimate studies of the mood and condition of individuals. They are almost always painted in blue.