Print Quality Details
Giclee printing is a professional fine art printing process that uses high-resolution inkjet printers, archival pigment inks, and acid-free papers or canvas. It is designed to produce highly accurate, long-lasting reproductions of artwork and photographs.
Giclee prints are considered one of the highest-quality print methods available. They offer exceptional detail, smooth color gradients, and accurate color reproduction.
Studies have shown that Giclee Prints' color vividness can last for more than 200 years, with tests conducted by independent bodies such as Wilhelm Research and printer manufacturers such as Epson. This gives collectors and art buyers assurance about this printing method.
Photo Rag premium paper provides a refined gallery look with its velvety matte surface, rich color tones, and soft tonal depth.
Textured Matte | 308 gsm | 18.9 mil | 100% Cotton Fiber
Photo Rag is a premium, smooth matte paper with a soft, fine texture that adds a slight depth to prints. It offers exceptional color reproduction and is highly regarded for its ability to render fine details with precision. Photo Rag is a go-to choice for photographers and artists looking for a versatile, high-quality paper.
Artwork Description and Symbolism
Summer isn’t only a season of brightness—it’s also a season of slowdown. When the heat becomes intense, the desert teaches a different kind of wisdom: pause, conserve, go inward, and move with precision. I Am Summer — I Am Conscious Awareness Having This Experience captures that paradox beautifully. It’s a Tucson-rooted vision of the Sonoran landscape as both outer environment and inner metaphor—where the relentless sun doesn’t just demand endurance, it invites presence, self-reflection, and the kind of focused commitment that turns a single goal into a lived transformation.
The artwork depicts a radiant desert scene bathed in brilliant sunlight. A tall saguaro stands as the central pillar of the composition—steady and watchful—surrounded by bare-limbed trees and desert brush that feel both exposed and quietly resilient. The light pours in with almost overwhelming intensity, with two glowing suns (one high overhead, one near the horizon) casting beams across the landscape. Above, a sky of dramatic, billowing clouds expands the space, creating an atmosphere that feels simultaneously vast and intimate—like time has stretched open. The warm palette of earth tones, muted greens, and bright blues reinforces the sensation of being held in a long, shimmering moment.
As a seasonal psychological archetype, Summer represents sustained energy, heightened awareness, and the discipline of attention. But in the desert, Summer also brings the natural instinct to retreat—into shade, into stillness, into a quieter interior room of the mind. This piece speaks to that lived truth: sometimes the most powerful progress happens when you stop scattering your energy and instead become devotional about one thing—one intention, one project, one healing edge. The intense light becomes symbolic of clarity: it reveals what matters, what distracts, and what you’re ready to complete, while the grounded desert forms remind you to pace yourself, conserve your resources, and keep your inner world organized as you move toward your goal.
If your ideal life requires both achievement and self-honesty—both drive and inner alignment—this artwork is designed to be a daily visual anchor. Place it where you plan, reflect, or create, and let it remind you: you don’t have to rush to be powerful. You can slow down, go inward, and still move forward with unmistakable purpose. Bring I Am Summer into your space now as a Tucson-born symbol of focused intention, conscious presence, and the quiet strength to finish what you started.
Accompanying Inspirational Exercise: The Summer Slowdown Focus Ritual (Pause, Reflect, Execute)
Use this practice for 7 days when you feel pulled in too many directions or when you need to commit to one meaningful goal.
Choose One Sun (1 minute): Write down one goal that deserves your full attention this week. Keep it specific: “Finish the draft,” “Complete three workouts,” “Make the phone call,” “Finalize the offer,” “Launch the print drop.”
Step Into Shade (2 minutes): Close your eyes and breathe slowly. Ask:
What am I avoiding by staying busy?
What am I afraid I’ll feel if I slow down?
What do I know I need to do next?
Write 2–3 honest sentences.
Conserve Your Water (1 minute): Identify one energy leak to reduce today (scrolling, over-explaining, multitasking, people-pleasing, perfectionism). Decide on one small boundary you will hold for the next 24 hours.
One Clean Action (10–30 minutes): Do one focused sprint on your goal—no multitasking. Set a timer. When it ends, stop. The point is consistency, not exhaustion.
This is Summer practiced wisely: intensity outside, stillness inside; one clear direction; disciplined energy; and a deeper relationship with your own awareness. Over time, you’ll start to associate achievement with alignment—so your progress feels less like pressure and more like purpose.