




About the Art
Gareth Maguire's Dave delves into the concept of the wildness within us, symbolized through the imagery of lungs intertwined with elements of nature. This piece combines organic forms and textures with a palette that reflects the vitality and resilience of life.
Framed Fine Art Print Includes:
- Two 32x32" acrylic panels (3/16 and 1/8 inch thickness) with polished edges.
- 4 easy-install wall mounts with screws and anchors (0.6"w x 1.5" L) (Silver or Gold)
- 28x28" art piece printed on archival, ultra smooth, matte, fine art paper.
- Lifetime warranty
Framed Canvas Art Includes:
- 5-sided 2" acrylic shadowbox lid (3/16" thick) with polished edges and pre-drilled holes.
- 4 screws and 2 D-Rings with hanging wire.
- 28x28x1" thick art piece printed on archival, ultra smooth, matte canvas.
- Lifetime warranty
Don't want to frame the artwork yourself? Purchase your favorite art piece for an additional $50, and we'll frame it for you!
About the Artist:
Gareth is an Irish artist living and working in Austin, Texas. He is primarily known for his unique, figurative paintings and prints featuring fragmented portraits and insurgent imagery from his life (past and present.)
Framed fine art paper prints and stretched canvas prints have a 10 business days or less lead time.
Clean acrylic panels with a soft, dry, lint-free cloth, or dish soap and water when needed. Do not use glass cleaners or spirits, which can dull the surface.

Gareth Maguire
Gareth is an Irish artist living and working in Austin, Texas. He is primarily known for his unique, figurative paintings and prints featuring fragmented portraits and insurgent imagery from his life (past and present.) He recontextualizes works of old masters such as Da Vinci, employing esthetics that echo Jean Michel Basquiat, Jean Dubuffet, and Picasso.
Gareth's art focuses on suggestive dichotomies such as freedom versus occupation, sovereignty versus subservience, war versus peace, love versus hate, Catholicism versus Protestantism, and religion versus irreligion.
Balancing abstraction with figuration, his social commentary is at times simple and humorous and at other times insightful and provocative.
He mixes stainless steel with canvas, steel bars with wood, and applies oil bar, acrylic and spray paint to just about any useable surface. His paintings are punctuated by doodles and phrases from his daughters, along with images and poetry from many of his favorite painters and writers. His life in Northern Ireland, England, France, New York, Los Angeles and Texas has given him a perspective rendered in contradictions - colorful yet blacker than black, unique yet familiar, a unification of the obscure and the obvious.