Print Quality Details
These museum-quality giclée canvas and premium paper prints are crafted with premium, ethically sourced materials and archival, acid-free inks to ensure lasting beauty. From durable poplar wood stretcher bars to precision Epson printing, every piece reflects exceptional craftsmanship, delivering a timeless, elegant artwork made to the highest professional standards.
These are outstanding giclées or archival pigment prints where each one is hand proofed and signed by me. Giclée printing is a fine art digital printing method using specialist archival pigment inks and acid-free papers; creating museum/gallery prints with excellent depth of colour, longevity and stability.
Studies have shown that Giclee Prints colour vividness can last in excess of 200 years with tests by independent bodies such as Wilhelm Research and printer manufacturers such as Epson. This gives assurance to collectors and art buyers of this type of printing method.
Canvas: We use Urth canvas, the world’s first solvent canvas with archival certification by the Fine Art Trade Guild. Manufactured by the leading canvas supplier of award-winning digital inkjet canvas, Breathing Color® uses breakthrough technology of agent-free Fluorescent Whitening and Chromata white to create a canvas free of optical brighteners while still producing canvas prints with bright whites and true vivid colors that will not fade or yellow over time. With OBA-free Urth canvas, your print can hang in direct sunlight and remain fade-resistant and as beautiful as the day it was printed. The canvas has a built-in coating, which makes it moisture and abrasion-resistant, with UV protection. The canvas is durable enough to withstand cleaning by taking a damp cloth to the surface to remove dust.
Inks: We use UltraChrome GS3 HD inks, which have a wide & rich color gamut range. The inks are sprayed upon canvas, hence the “giclee application,” with extreme detail and vibrancy, thus creating a stunningly sharp image. Tested by Wilhelm Research, these lightfast, archival inks are designed to last 100+ years.
Wood: The wood used to create the stretcher bars for your print is made from poplar trees, which are extremely strong and stable.
Printing Equipment: Printers include the Epson Surecolor S80600 and the 9900 Pro Series, which are state-of-the-art in the industry and print at astounding resolutions of 1440 ppi.
Artwork Description and Symbolism
“I Am the Reincarnations and Renewal of My Individual Being, United as One with All, God, The All” is a gentle paradox made visible: you are both singular and inseparable, both a specific life and a thread in something infinite. In the broader vision of The Desert Abstraction Project, the Sonoran Desert becomes a living scripture—teaching that spiritual awakening is not an abstract idea, but an intimate return to wholeness. This piece speaks to the cycle every seeker eventually recognizes: endings that become beginnings, identities that evolve, and the quiet remembrance that, beneath the many forms of “me,” there is one eternal soul that is unified with the All, containing the whole universe through my perception as a fractal point of Consciousness, the sum of all my experiences, as an extension of God/ Souce Councsiouness/ the All.
At the center of the composition, a large, softly blurred flower opens in muted greenish tones—its delicate white filaments glowing like a quiet revelation. Surrounding it are linear, organic shapes of paddle-cactus, with photographic micro-close-ups of their spines, rendered in earthy browns and warm pinks. These sharp lines cross and intersect the image like the protective structures we build over time—habits, boundaries, defenses, stories. The background carries a vintage, weathered texture of beige and blush, giving the whole scene the feel of memory: something lived, layered, and tenderly held. The visual conversation between softness and sharpness creates a powerful tension—fragility and resilience, surrender and self-protection—mirroring the human experience of growth through change.
The title brings the deeper teaching into focus: reincarnation as renewal, not merely as doctrine, but as lived transformation. In the language of the project biography, fear is the illusion of separation, and love is the essence of God; this work invites you to feel the dissolving of that illusion. The flower suggests the soul’s continual opening, while the spines suggest the personality’s learned defenses—both necessary at different times, both capable of evolving. The piece becomes a mirror for anyone doing real inner work: learning to honor the individual self without forgetting the larger unity to which it belongs. If you are drawn to art that doesn’t just look beautiful, but quietly re-centers your awareness—art that turns a wall into a daily reminder of renewal and belonging—this piece is meant for your home or workspace. Bring it into your space now, and let it keep returning you to the truth that you are changing, and you are held.
Accompanying Inspirational Exercise — “Renewal & Unity Practice” (5 minutes, grounding and restorative)
Sit with the artwork and focus first on the flower (your renewing essence), then on the spines (your protective self). Write two short lists: (1) What I’m shedding (a belief, habit, fear, role, or old story) and (2) What I’m becoming (a quality you’re choosing to embody—patience, courage, trust, compassion, discipline). Then close your eyes and place a hand on your heart. Take three slow breaths and repeat: “I can evolve without abandoning myself. I can be myself without feeling separate.” Finally, choose one small action within 24 hours that supports the “becoming” list—one boundary, one honest conversation, one moment of self-care, or one act of service. Practiced regularly, this turns the artwork into a lived ritual of transformation: you honor your individual path while remembering your unity with God, The All.