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by Richard Reeve
$10.00
Shape
Image Size
Product Details
Our wooden holiday ornaments are 1/2" thick, approximately 4" tall, and include a string for easy hanging and a magnet on the back for use on refrigerators. Ornaments are available in six different shapes, including: stars, hearts, bells, trees, ovals, and stockings.
Design Details
New York Bocce Volo - Richard Reeve... more
Care Instructions
Gently clean with a damp cloth.
Ships Within
1 - 2 business days
New York Bocce Volo - Richard Reeve
Visiting New York City on an unseasonably warm day in early February I was surprised to see a group of gentlemen playing a game of boules in Bryant Park. When I first played this back in the South of France in the 1970's the version we played was petanque, but I believe the likely variant here will be the Italian game, bocce volo.
These guys were good, clearly having played for years.
I am a visual story teller based in southern Pennsylvania, USA and my imagery is inspired from everyday objects and situations I encounter through my travels. My work has been exhibited and sold at the Bradford Avenue Galleries (Allinson Gallery and Huston Gallery) at Chester County Art Association, in addition to this online store. My images have also been exhibited at Panorama XXL, Rouen, France and the Cincinnati Museum Center, Cincinnati, USA. I hope you will find something that inspires you, amuses you, makes you think, smile, frown, or perhaps just scratch your head. Go on, dive in... and for those of you who do so, I offer a big thank you for looking through my window on the world! ~Richard ReevePhotos Inspiring...
$10.00
Meg Shearer
: ) I love this! l/f!
Richard Reeve replied:
Thank you, Meg. These older gentlemen were having a quiet but enjoyable time. It's strange because it was a cold February day in NYC and just seeing them play in the gravel park took me back to the late 1970's and the holidays in the South of France where the locals played petanque, their version of boules, in the warm evenings... plus ca change, as they say, I guess...