Linocut printed onto a smooth white acid free card.
The print image itself is 10cm in width and 15cm in height with a 1 - 2cm border around the actual print image.
This linocut depicts a hand with roses, planetary bodies and a swallow.
Inspired by one of the fractal languages of the earth, Gaias consciousness, speaking in flowers.
Traditionally the rose, an ancient flower, were woven into garlands and offered to Venus and many other goddesses before that.
The first mention of rosary-like devotion is over five thousand years old and refers to japamala, which in Sanskrit means 'muttering garland'. Like the word rosary, mala originally referred not to a circle of beads but to a sacred circle of flowers. Early on, men and women simply wove their chaplets of roses for the Goddess.
Plastic-free packaging in a compostable cello sleeve, worldwide shipping from the UK in a recyclable card sleeve.
Printing ink, smooth white card
31 Artist Reviews
£20
Linocut printed onto a smooth white acid free card.
The print image itself is 10cm in width and 15cm in height with a 1 - 2cm border around the actual print image.
This linocut depicts a hand with roses, planetary bodies and a swallow.
Inspired by one of the fractal languages of the earth, Gaias consciousness, speaking in flowers.
Traditionally the rose, an ancient flower, were woven into garlands and offered to Venus and many other goddesses before that.
The first mention of rosary-like devotion is over five thousand years old and refers to japamala, which in Sanskrit means 'muttering garland'. Like the word rosary, mala originally referred not to a circle of beads but to a sacred circle of flowers. Early on, men and women simply wove their chaplets of roses for the Goddess.
Plastic-free packaging in a compostable cello sleeve, worldwide shipping from the UK in a recyclable card sleeve.
Printing ink, smooth white card
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This artwork is sold by Victoria Lucy Williams from United Kingdom