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WAIT CHAPEL

Edition: 1000 signed and numbered Image size: 9 and 7/8 by 14
and 1/8 Print size: 13 and 3/8 by 17 and 7/8 Price: $30.00 Tax
applicable for NC customers
Wait Chapel has long been a focal point of the Wake Forest University
campus. Named in honor of the university's founder, Samuel Wait,
it was the first building to be constructed when the university
moved from Wake County to Winston-Salem, North Carolina in the
mid 1950's. Chuck Kirby is a local artist who resides in High
Point, but grew up in Winston-Salem and has depicted in fine
detail the classic architectural features that make Wait Chapel
the noteworthy building that it is.
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BILTMORE HOUSE

Edition: 1000 signed and numbered Image size: 8 and 5/8 by 19
and 1/8 Print size: 12 and 3/8 by 22 and 5/8 Price: $30.00 Tax
applicable for NC customers
1995 marked the centennial of America's largest privately owned
residence- George Vanderbilt's Biltmore Estate, completed in
1895. Designed by Mr. Vanderbilt, architect Richard Morris Hunt,
and landscape architect Frederick Law Olmstead, Biltmore was
modeled after Europe's finest working estates. The 250 room
French Renaissance chateau was originally surrounded by 125,000
acres of landscaped gardens and managed forests. Chuck Kirby,
a North Carolina artist who resides in High Point, has created
a panoramic image of Biltmore House which features the architectural
detail and craftsmanship that place it among the country's finest
historic homes. Biltmore Estate is located in the Blue Ridge
Mountains of Asheville, North Carolina.
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REYNOLDA HOUSE

Edition: 500 signed and numbered Image size: 9 and 3/8 by 17
and 3/4 Print size: 12 and 7/8 by 21 and 1/2 Price: $30.00 Tax
applicable for NC customers
Reynolda House has long been among Winston-Salem's most prominent
homes due to its heritage and noteworthy architectural features.
The house was designed by Philadelphia architect Charles Barton
Keen and built in 1914-1917 by Richard Joshua Reynolds, founder
of R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. By design, it exemplifies a relaxed
atmosphere in a comfortable domestic setting. It is now operated
as the Reynolda House Museum of American Art. Chuck Kirby has
depicted the house in late summer surrounded by the many shrubs
and trees that make for an inviting setting.
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