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SPORT CANVAS ART - REAL HAND PAINTED ART
We have captured years of classic sporting moments to bring you a selection of stunning canvas art. We Canvas Art Direct have taken from England's 1966 World Cup final, The classic fight with Muhammed Ali vs Sonny Liston, Steven Gerrard proudly lifting the European Champions League cup. This section is perfect for gifts and for any art lover looking to bring a sporting memory into there home or office.
BABES CANVAS ART - REAL HAND PAINTED ART
This section is one for the lad's, we have taken some of the sexiest women on the planet and created some of the most sought after canvas art. This section has become very popular and has something for everyone. We have canvas art featuring Kylie Minogue and Angelina Jolie
BANKSY CANVAS ART - REAL HAND PAINTED ART
This section is packed full of canvas art in tribute to graffiti street artist Banksy. We have various pieces of canvas art from Bansky including Where's Hollywood, Mild Mild West, Pulp Fiction Bananas, Banksy sniffing copper, Sewer Rat, Ghetto Rabbit, Banksy Phonebox, Melting Phonebox, Kissing Coppers there simply loads.
MOVIE CANVAS ART - REAL HAND PAINTED ART
Movie Art is now one of the most popular genres to be captured on canvas. We have artwork taken from of the greatest movies ever made each with our own pop art touch, we have canvas art from classic films such as Scarface, Goodfellas, Leon, Jaws, The Krays, Casino, Rocky, James Bond, Bruce Lee, Braveheart, Chopper, Clockwork Orange, Rambo, Snatch ETC
MUSIC CANVAS ART - REAL HAND PAINTED ART
Have a look at our music canvas art section it is filled with loads of top quality hand painted art. You will not find any online retailer with a bigger range of music canvas art than us, we have canvas art works of pretty much every music talent that has even lived with acts such as The Beatles, Blondie, Rolling Stones, David Bowie, Madonna, Elvis, Jeff Buckley and Angus young.
MODERN CANVAS ART - REAL HAND PAINTED ART
Browse this section for all of your modern day canvas art, we hae taken some contemporary and scenic images and transformed them into to stunning art pieces fit for any gallery. We have canvas works of modern day wonders such as the Burj Al Arab in Dubai, West Railey Beach Thailand, The San Francisco Golden Gate Bridge and may others all hand painted and ready to hang on your wall.
INTERNATIONAL WORLD WIDE SHIPPING
Canvas Art Direct offers world wide shipping with prices that wont break the bank. Our canvas art is dispatched using secure international couriers with all packages fully insured for loss and damages.
WHOLESALE AND TRADE CANVAS PRICES
Our trade and wholesale service is designed to supply businesses such as interior designers, bars, lounges, home furnishing stores and online retailers to beneift from a discount from our current store prices. We offer a specialist trade rates for any professional or organisation seeking our art work. In order for you see if you can qualify for trade prices please contact using our custom email form (click here). We also offer substancial discounts on bulk orders so if you are looking at purchasing a large order please feel free to contact us to see what we can do for.
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CANVAS OF THE WEEK!!
Welcome to Canvas Art Direct's brand new "Canvas of the week" review. Each week we will be reviewing and detailing one of our canvas master pieces so book mark this page to keep in touch with our latest pieces of canvas art..........
Our Clockwork Orange Movie Canvas Art Painting.....

We have taken the legendary A Clockwork Orange is a 1971 satirical futuristic film adaptation of Anthony Burgess's 1962 novel of the same name. The film concerns Alex DeLarge (Malcolm McDowell), a charismatic, psychopathic delinquent whose pleasures are classical music (especially Beethoven), rape, and ultra-violence. He leads a small gang of thugs (Pete, Georgie, and Dim), whom he calls his droogs (from the Russian друг, “friend”, “buddy”). Alex narrates most of the film in Nadsat, a fractured, contemporary adolescent argot comprising Slavic (especially Russian), English, and Cockney rhyming slang.
This cinematic adaptation was produced, directed, and co-written by Stanley Kubrick. It features disturbing, violent images, to facilitate social commentary about psychiatry, youth gangs, and other contemporary social, political, and economic subjects in a dystopian, future Britain. A Clockwork Orange features a soundtrack comprising mostly classical music selections and Moog synthesizer compositions by Walter Carlos. A notable exception is “Singin’ in the Rain”, chosen because it was a song whose lyrics actor Malcolm McDowell knew.[1] The now-iconic poster of A Clockwork Orange, and its images, was created by designer Bill Gold. The film also holds the record in the Guinness World Records for being the first movie in media history using the Dolby Sound system.
Narrated by Alex DeLarge, the film opens on Alex and his friends, Pete (Michael Tarn), Georgie (James Marcus) and Dim (Warren Clarke), partaking of mescaline-spiked milk at the Korova Milk Bar prior to an evening of "the old ultra-violence". They proceed to beat up an elderly vagrant under a motorway and interrupt an attempted gang rape of a woman by a rival gang led by Billyboy[2] (Richard Connaught). They subsequently get in a brawl with their rivals. Upon hearing the sounds of police sirens, the gang flees, stealing a car and driving into the countryside on the wrong side of the road. They then gain entry to the home of Mr. Alexander, a writer, under false pretenses and assault him while violently raping his wife (Adrienne Corri), all while Alex sings "Singing' in the Rain." When they return to the milk bar, Alex chides Dim when he interrupts a female patron while she sings a selection of Beethoven, a composer Alex admires.
The next day, after skipping school, picking up and having sex with two girls from a record shop, and ignoring the concerns of Mr. Deltoid (Aubrey Morris) (a social worker who may have sexual feelings for him and touches him inappropriately), Alex regroups with his droogs who challenge his authority: with Georgie insisting the gang be run in a "new way" that entails less power for Alex and more ambitious crimes. As they walk along a canal, Alex attacks his droogs in order to re-establish his leadership.
That night, the gang attempts to invade the home of a woman (Miriam Karlin) who lives alone with her cats and runs a health farm. In the process, she gets into a fight with Alex, and Alex mortally bludgeons her with a phallus-shaped statue. As they flee the scene, Dim smashes a milk bottle across Alex's face, temporarily blinding him and leaving him to be arrested by the police. During his interrogation, Alex is told by Mr. Deltoid that he is now a murderer as the woman died from her injuries. To add insult to injury, Deltoid simply spits on Alex in sheer disgust.
In prison, Alex becomes friends with the chaplain and takes a keen interest in the Bible, but primarily in the more violent characters. When the Minister of the Interior (Anthony Sharp) arrives at the prison looking for volunteers for the Ludovico technique, an experimental aversion therapy for rehabilitating criminals, Alex eagerly steps forward, much to the disgust of Chief Officer Barnes (Michael Bates). At the Ludovico facility, Alex is placed in a straitjacket and forced to watch films containing scenes of extreme violence while being given drugs to induce reactions of revulsion. The films include one of real scenes in Nazi Germany, which includes a soundtrack of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony. Alex realises this will likely condition him against Beethoven's music and makes an agonised though unsuccessful attempt to have the treatment end prematurely before the conditioning sets in. After the treatment is finished, Alex's reformed behaviour is demonstrated for the audience. He is unable to respond back to an actor (John Clive) shouting insults and picking a fight with him, and a feeling of sickness attacks him when he is presented with a young naked woman who sexually arouses him. The Minister declares Alex to be cured, but the chaplain asserts that Alex no longer has any free will.
Alex is let free from prison two years after his sentencing. He finds his parents have rented out his room to a lodger named Joe (Clive Francis), leaving him on his own. Alex comes across the vagrant he had assaulted before the treatment, who calls in his friends and they attack Alex. Two policemen arrive to break up the fight, but Alex discovers the policemen to be his former droogs, Dim and Georgie. They drag Alex out to the countryside, where they brutally assault and half-drown him.
Battered and bruised, Alex wanders to the home of Mr. Alexander, who does not recognize him from two years prior, due to Alex’ wearing a mask at the time. He takes Alex in, aware that he had undergone the Ludovico treatment. Mr. Alexander tends to Alex's wounds, but the memories of his assault return when Alex sings "Singin' in the Rain" while taking a bath. Mr. Alexander drugs Alex, locks him in the upper floor of his home and plays Beethoven's Ninth Symphony at full volume through a powerful stereo on the floor below, knowing that the Ludovico treatment will cause immense pain to Alex. In order to escape the torture, Alex becomes suicidal and throws himself out of the room's window.
Alex recovers consciousness to find himself in traction, with dreams about doctors messing around inside his head. Through a series of psychological tests, Alex finds that he no longer has a revulsion to violence. The Minister of the Interior comes to Alex and apologises for subjecting him to the treatment, and informs him that Mr. Alexander has been "put away." The Minister then offers Alex an important government job and, as a show of goodwill, has a stereo wheeled to his bedside playing Beethoven's Ninth. Alex then realises that instead of an adverse reaction to the music, he sees images of sexual pleasure. He then states ( in a sarcastic and menacing voice-over) "I was cured, all right!"
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