Morning Lucy,
I would say a definite No! And that because, though the view is from heaven, all of the events that are taking place, the seals, trumpets and bowl judgments, plagues of the two witnesses and all related information, are literal events that are going to be taking place on the earth. Therefore, if the church was on the earth during that time, the events of God's wrath would still be affecting them. Just because John is in heaven from Rev.4:1 on-ward doesn't change the fact that the events of wrath will be taking place to the earth and its inhabitance. The reason that the church is no longer mentioned after the end of chapter three, is because chapter 4:1 is a prophetic allusion to the church being gathered. The key to understanding the order of Revelation is found in Rev.1:19 where John is told to write:
What you have seen = Everything written from Rev.1:1 to 1:19
What is now = Represented by the letters to the seven churches, which is representing the entire church period
What will take place later = The events which take place after the "what is now," i.e. after the church period
In Rev.4:1 the voice that sounds like a trumpet says "come up here and I will show you what must take place 'after this,' i.e. after the "what is now," after the church period. This why we no longer see the word "church" appear in the narrative. In further support of this, the opening of the first seal is what initiates the day of the Lord, the wrath of God, which again, the church is not appointed to suffer and which Jesus said he would keep us out of (1 Thes.1:10, Rev.3:10). Therefore, the church must be removed prior to that first seal being opened, which again is being represented in Rev.4:1. It is the word "Hagios" translated as "Saints" that we begin to see, which is in reference to those who become believers after the church has been gathered and during the time of God's wrath.
Regarding this, John was previously told to write letters to the seven churches. And then in Rev.7:9-17 he is seeing a vision of a great number of white robed saints which no man can count. The very fact that the elder is asking John who they are demonstrates that this group is not the church. If this group was the church, why would the elder be asking John who those are whom he just wrote to? The fact that John says he doesn't know who they are and the fact that John is told that these are those who will have come out of the great tribulation, tells us that this group is not the church.
In short, though the view changes, the events of wrath will be taking place to and on the earth and its inhabitants.