Quechuan Herder with Suris - Photo


Item Number: 151

Time Left: CLOSED

Value: $300

Online Close: Nov 27, 2022 11:59 PM EST

Bid History: 12 bids - Item Sold!

Description

Wasim Muklashy, professional photographer and videographer, has donated a beautiful photo of a Quechuan woman tending to her prize Suris on the Peruvian altiplano of the Andes Mountains.  This is a special, Suri Network limited single edition print signed by the photographer.  It captures the essence of Suris - flowing locks, sweet faces, and gentle nature.  Don't miss out on bidding!


16" x 10.5” framed art print with 2” white mat.
Delivered "ready to hang" with pre-attached hanging wire, mounting hooks, and nails.


Image:
16.00" x 10.50”
Mat Border:
2.00”
Frame Width:
0.88”
Overall:
21.50" x 16.00"

Special Instructions

Donated by:  Wasim Muklashy


Wasim is a media professional involved in everything from print publications to video production. He began his career writing for various Primedia and Conde Nast publications.  His attentive eye for detail and keen editorial sense led him to spend several years as a Senior Editor and Creative Director, producing and editing award-winning marketing and commercial videos and corporate media packages for Fortune 500 companies including Gap, Mattel, and Warner Brothers, featuring everyone from Heidi Klum and Tiger Woods to Common & Beyonce.


Muklashy currently devotes much of his time to various humanitarian and environmental causes, and has served as a volunteer docent in the California State Park System, where he self-tasked himself to develop original multimedia assets to help bring more attention to our underfunded protected public spaces.  Most recently, Wasim became part owner of Alpaca by Design, a retail store in Sisters, Oregon that specializes in alpaca products, and is one of the founders of The Original Alpaca Picnics Experience. Yes, a picnic…with alpacas. This was a direct result of life during, and after, the pandemic, in which Muklashy found solace through working with alpacas in Central Oregon with Amanda VandenBosch of Flying Dutchman Alpacas.