Super quality Arthur Delaney print. The frame has some minor wear but all in all a beautiful thing. Some info on the artist is below:

Arthur Delaney: The L.S. Lowry Protégé
​Arthur Delaney (1927–1987) was a prominent Manchester artist who became famous for capturing the industrial atmosphere of mid-20th-century Northern England. Born into a theatrical family, he worked at a textile design studio for over three decades before pursuing painting full-time. Delaney was heavily influenced by his friend and mentor, L.S. Lowry, but developed a distinct style that felt more intimate and nostalgic. While Lowry often painted vast, bustling crowds of "matchstick men," Delaney focused on the play of light and shadow within the soot-stained cityscapes, aiming to evoke the specific "memory" of a bygone Manchester rather than just a literal documentation of it.
​Lewis’s and the Iconic Trams
​One of Delaney's most celebrated subjects was the area around Lewis’s Department Store in Manchester, often depicted on rainy or smog-filled evenings. In these works, the looming, grand architecture of Lewis’s serves as a stately backdrop to the rhythmic movement of the city's iconic red and white trams. Delaney used these trams as a primary light source, painting their glowing windows and the reflections of their headlights on wet cobblestones to create a sense of warmth against the industrial gloom. These paintings are highly prized by collectors today because they perfectly encapsulate a specific era of Mancunian history, blending the elegance of the city's commercial hub with the everyday hustle of the working-class commute