Description
This is a print of Eastern European city landscape, likely Prague.
Looks very much like original painting, but more likely is a hand-embellished canvas print.
Signed in the right lower corner in Cyrillic and English by P. Kiyanitsa. After the Cyrillic name there is also 2005 p, which could be a year or price in rubles.
This artist's works were sold by Art Maison Canada.
Framed, no glass.
Eastern European Cityscape by P. Kiyanitsa (2005)
Basic Details
Artist Overview
P. Kiyanitsa (П. Кияниця) is a contemporary Eastern European artist whose works have been distributed through decor and commercial art outlets such as Art Maison Canada. His style typically blends romanticized European architecture with rich, atmospheric colors and a stylized, slightly whimsical presentation of cityscapes. The presence of Cyrillic script suggests Ukrainian or Russian origin.
Artwork Analysis
This piece strongly resembles views of Prague, Czech Republic, especially the Church of St. Nicholas and the iconic Charles Bridge towers, though it may also represent a composite or idealized Eastern European townscape. The fiery sunset palette and dense, warm architecture give it a dramatic, romantic feel typical of mid-2000s European decorative fine art.
The visible texture suggests hand-embellishment, meaning a print has been enhanced with additional paint or brush strokes to simulate the feel of an original painting. This adds value above a flat print but is still considered a reproduction, not an original painting.
Authentication
Estimated Market Value (as of 2025)
(depending on platform, region, and buyer interest)
Market Notes
These prints are not highly collectible but remain desirable for interior design due to their warmth and romantic architectural themes. Comparable works by Kiyanitsa have sold on eBay and Etsy in the $50–$200 range, especially when framed and in excellent condition.
Recommendations
You may want to describe it as:
"Hand-embellished canvas print of Eastern European cityscape, likely Prague, signed by Ukrainian artist P. Kiyanitsa (2005), framed and ready to hang."