Alexander Constantine “Differences”

$2,000.00

One authenticated Alexander Constantine painting from Jeremy’s personal collection

Details:

• Artist: Alexander Constantine

• Title: Differences

• Medium: Original Acrylic Painting

• Framed Size: Painting 8x10 inches, framed dimension 17 1/2 x 19 1/2

• Certificate of Authenticity included

• Signed by Artist

• Only one available — once it’s gone, it’s gone

Alexander Constantine — “Title Differences”

Back when I was working for a jeweler in Carlsbad, California, life wasn’t normal.

My boss? Drove a Ferrari, bought a Rolls-Royce in Vegas in cash off a single jewelry sale, and had estates next to people like Bill Gates.

The kind of man who could buy $1,000 shoes just to make sure I “looked right” in the room.

Every day, something new. Something loud. Something expensive.

But in one of his back rooms—surrounded by diamonds, vintage watches, and gallery-tier art—there was this one piece: “Differences” by Alexander Constantine.

It didn’t have fanfare. It didn’t need it.

It pulled me in. It was like looking at a part of myself that had been painted before I even arrived.

I turned to him and said:

“This one’s mine.”

He didn’t argue.

He handed it to me. No questions. No price tag.

He knew—just like I knew—that art like that doesn’t belong to whoever holds it. It belongs to whoever feels it.

How do you feel about this piece? Does it make you feel bold?

Add To Cart

One authenticated Alexander Constantine painting from Jeremy’s personal collection

Details:

• Artist: Alexander Constantine

• Title: Differences

• Medium: Original Acrylic Painting

• Framed Size: Painting 8x10 inches, framed dimension 17 1/2 x 19 1/2

• Certificate of Authenticity included

• Signed by Artist

• Only one available — once it’s gone, it’s gone

Alexander Constantine — “Title Differences”

Back when I was working for a jeweler in Carlsbad, California, life wasn’t normal.

My boss? Drove a Ferrari, bought a Rolls-Royce in Vegas in cash off a single jewelry sale, and had estates next to people like Bill Gates.

The kind of man who could buy $1,000 shoes just to make sure I “looked right” in the room.

Every day, something new. Something loud. Something expensive.

But in one of his back rooms—surrounded by diamonds, vintage watches, and gallery-tier art—there was this one piece: “Differences” by Alexander Constantine.

It didn’t have fanfare. It didn’t need it.

It pulled me in. It was like looking at a part of myself that had been painted before I even arrived.

I turned to him and said:

“This one’s mine.”

He didn’t argue.

He handed it to me. No questions. No price tag.

He knew—just like I knew—that art like that doesn’t belong to whoever holds it. It belongs to whoever feels it.

How do you feel about this piece? Does it make you feel bold?

One authenticated Alexander Constantine painting from Jeremy’s personal collection

Details:

• Artist: Alexander Constantine

• Title: Differences

• Medium: Original Acrylic Painting

• Framed Size: Painting 8x10 inches, framed dimension 17 1/2 x 19 1/2

• Certificate of Authenticity included

• Signed by Artist

• Only one available — once it’s gone, it’s gone

Alexander Constantine — “Title Differences”

Back when I was working for a jeweler in Carlsbad, California, life wasn’t normal.

My boss? Drove a Ferrari, bought a Rolls-Royce in Vegas in cash off a single jewelry sale, and had estates next to people like Bill Gates.

The kind of man who could buy $1,000 shoes just to make sure I “looked right” in the room.

Every day, something new. Something loud. Something expensive.

But in one of his back rooms—surrounded by diamonds, vintage watches, and gallery-tier art—there was this one piece: “Differences” by Alexander Constantine.

It didn’t have fanfare. It didn’t need it.

It pulled me in. It was like looking at a part of myself that had been painted before I even arrived.

I turned to him and said:

“This one’s mine.”

He didn’t argue.

He handed it to me. No questions. No price tag.

He knew—just like I knew—that art like that doesn’t belong to whoever holds it. It belongs to whoever feels it.

How do you feel about this piece? Does it make you feel bold?