











"The Final Sunset" – Cleveland Browns Stadium from Downtown (20x16 – Acoustic Panel)
Shot from the roof of the abandoned Rockefeller Building (by someone who absolutely had permission, of course), “The Final Sunset” captures Cleveland Browns Stadium backlit by a surreal, glowing sun dipping into Lake Erie. The saturated orange sky and cool blue water form a minimalist gradient, framing the stadium in a moment that feels both celebratory and elegiac.
This is more than a sports venue—it’s a landmark whose future is uncertain. This piece preserves a view that can no longer be replicated: the Rockefeller rooftop is now boarded and sealed, the perspective lost. What remains is this image, caught in a moment of transformation—part photojournalism, part daydream, part historical artifact.
Produced on a 20x16 acoustic panel, this artwork doesn’t just absorb sound; it holds a story.
Shot from the roof of the abandoned Rockefeller Building (by someone who absolutely had permission, of course), “The Final Sunset” captures Cleveland Browns Stadium backlit by a surreal, glowing sun dipping into Lake Erie. The saturated orange sky and cool blue water form a minimalist gradient, framing the stadium in a moment that feels both celebratory and elegiac.
This is more than a sports venue—it’s a landmark whose future is uncertain. This piece preserves a view that can no longer be replicated: the Rockefeller rooftop is now boarded and sealed, the perspective lost. What remains is this image, caught in a moment of transformation—part photojournalism, part daydream, part historical artifact.
Produced on a 20x16 acoustic panel, this artwork doesn’t just absorb sound; it holds a story.
Shot from the roof of the abandoned Rockefeller Building (by someone who absolutely had permission, of course), “The Final Sunset” captures Cleveland Browns Stadium backlit by a surreal, glowing sun dipping into Lake Erie. The saturated orange sky and cool blue water form a minimalist gradient, framing the stadium in a moment that feels both celebratory and elegiac.
This is more than a sports venue—it’s a landmark whose future is uncertain. This piece preserves a view that can no longer be replicated: the Rockefeller rooftop is now boarded and sealed, the perspective lost. What remains is this image, caught in a moment of transformation—part photojournalism, part daydream, part historical artifact.
Produced on a 20x16 acoustic panel, this artwork doesn’t just absorb sound; it holds a story.