Rie Munoz Warm Springs, Atlin B.C. Original Signed Ltd Ed. #950 Large Framed Print


#321/950


Large Wood Framed matted with glass. Measures with frame approx 23"x16". Print alone measures  approx. 17"x10". Frame is not perfect has some nicking and scrapes but the green frame goes beautifully with the print colors.


 "Warm springs Atlin B.C.", was the 7th print issued in 1997 by Rie Munoz


 Although adults also dip into Atlin Warm Springs in British Columbia, it’s very apparent that Mother Nature designed it especially for children; the pool is warm, not hot. It’s only about three feet deep and just the right size for its patrons. It’s in total wilderness and the outlet on either side is lined with a profuse growth of watercress.   


Shipped using retail ground. Shipping time and cost can be reduced if you prefer to purchase without the frame and glass and only the matte and print. Please message me to arrange.


Please check my store for a large collection of Limited Edition Rie Munoz art prints posted and more prints to be posted.


Rie Muoz An Alaskan for 65 years, Rie (pronounced "ree") is known for her bright, colorful paintings and good cheer. Her watercolors were not realistic, but they captured the spirit of her subjects. She loved people, and it showed in her work: Alaskans doing Alaska-type things, fishermen working, children at play, village life, legends, and dogs. Rie once said she never met a dog she didn't like. While living in California in 1950, she decided to plan a trip. Looking at a map, she drew a line to the farthest and most interesting place she could afford on a shoestring budget. Rie chose Alaska, traveling up the Inside Passage by steamship. She fell in love with Juneau immediately and gave herself one day until the boat was scheduled to return to the Lower 48 to find a job and a place to live. Rie found both, and Alaska became her home. During her years in the Last Frontier, Rie visited and sketched every Alaska community on the road system and most of those off the grid. She held many jobs. Among them were journalist, teacher, museum curator, artist, and raising her son. One of her most memorable positions was on King Island in 1951, where she taught 25 Inupiaq children (see photo to right). Rie studied art at Washington and Lee University in Virginia. Inspired by an ad in a matchbook in 1957, she took a correspondence course through the Famous Artists Painting Course program. She received the University of Alaska's Honorary Doctorate of Humanities Degree in May of 1999. Her paintings, prints, and reproductions are carried by galleries throughout the United States and Canada. Rie Muoz was born in southern California in 1921 as Marie Mounier. Her parents were from Holland and she spent a lot of her childhood there, where Rie was a common nickname. Rie passed away in Juneau on April 6, 2015. She will be greatly missed, but herart lives on for all to enjoy.