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Openning hours
  • Monday Closed
  • Tuesday 12:00 – 5:00 PM
  • Wednesday 12:00 – 5:00 PM
  • Thursday 12:00 – 5:00 PM
  • Friday 12:00 – 5:00 PM
  • Saturday 12:00 – 5:00 PM
  • Sunday Closed
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Clement Frame Shop & Art Gallery
Clement Frame Shop & Art Gallery
Clement Frame Shop & Art Gallery
Reviews
Bear Kosik (03/12/2021)
Today was my third visit to this business. Parking spots on the street always seem to be available. I previously had two embroidery projects framed. Satisfied with the work, I brought two serigraphs to them. The staff quickly found mattes and frames based on my choices that will improve viewing of the artwork. The gentleman I worked with gave a thorough explanation of how the prints would be flattened. He also explained the beveled edge of the mattes and the effects that has on viewing the artwork. I look forward to seeing the finished product.
Chris Coston (03/27/2021)
This is the ideal frame shop. Customer service is perfect! High quality choices abound. The finished product is always exactly right. Once you go here you’ll never want to go anywhere else. I’ve found great art here too. This is one of my favorite places ever.
Lauren G (12/23/2020)
Always great customer service!
Frank Ausiello (05/31/2019)
I've had many things framed here and the work is impeccable. The years of experience they have would take 4 or 5 other shops combined to equal. This shop is top shelf if you love your Art have it framed here.
Will Juntunen (10/08/2019)
The gallery has returned to a program of serious gallery shows with beautiful results.nnI made a brief sweep of the Troy arts scene. Clement Gallery had launched a show by Elizabeth Apgar - Smith, a painter known for her depictions of farm life in the Schoharie River Valley. Her husband and she made a journey by boat to where the Schoharie River joins the Mohawk River, making reference pictures and photographs. The couple continued along the Mohawk until Cohoes Falls forced the boat into the chain of four locks in Waterford, connecting the Mohawk River to the Hudson. The two arrived in Troy and docked. And the two returned to their home to work.nnThe pictures and sketched she transformed into a series of oil paintings of the journey. I loved them. Almost all of her images struck me deeply because I had witnessed the landmarks from the window of the Amtrak Train that plies the route along the Hudson and Mohawk Rivers. She captured a ruined aqueduct that carried the Erie Canal over a tributary of the Mohawk. She rendered defunct factories along the way. Even the empty white edifice of the Adirondack Power Company loomed ten stories high on the south bank of the Mohawk River. Sadly, she had priced a number of the oils too inexpensively, now marked as purchased with a red dot on the label. The collection belongs together and the smaller pieces have owners now who will take them home at the end of the show. Maybe she can paint a set intended to be sold as one collection. A museum could dedicate a gallery to the collection.nnI found her Facebook page. Maybe she’ll take a fancy to the next, natural subject for her painting. The Old Champlain Canal begins in Waterford and continues north to Lake Champlain. Although much of the abandoned canal passes through woods and swamps, many stretches remain passable on bicycle. She’ll be delighted to see that turtles abound and blue herons flock on the way. In fact, the beavers themselves have taken over the regulation of water levels. Let’s find out what she imagines to be possible.
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