The wall art at Rare Finds isn’t prints pulled from a stock image library and stretched on canvas. Most of it arrived in a shipping container alongside furniture, selected by Tony in the same workshops where he buys tables and chairs — because the same craftspeople who make furniture often produce wall art from the same materials and traditions.
You’ll find large-format photography printed behind glass with vivid saturation that holds up in direct light — canyon views, field scenes, architectural images with depth. Hand-painted canvases in oil depicting everything from cycling pelotons to highland cattle. Three-dimensional ballerina sculptures built from layered paper and resin. Framed reclaimed brick molds. Metal embossed tile panels.
Some pieces are editions of one. Some come in small runs. The provenance varies by piece — ask when you’re in the store.
Wall art scale is consistently misjudged from photos. A piece that looks imposing in an online image may be 18 inches across. Bring your wall dimensions and Tony or the staff can help you identify scale appropriately.