Make a statement in any room with this framed poster, printed on thick matte paper. The wood frames from renewable forests add an extra touch of class.
• Ayous wood .75″ (1.9 cm) thick frame from renewable forests
• Paper thickness: 10.3 mil (0.26 mm)
• Paper weight: 189 g/m²
• Lightweight
• Acrylite front protector
• Hanging hardware included
• Blank product components in the US sourced from Japan and the US
• Blank product components in the EU sourced from Japan and Latvia
How to attach hooks on 24″ × 36″ horizontal frames:
Place each of the mounting hooks 1 inch (2.5 cm) from frame corners when hanging horizontally.
This product is made especially for you as soon as you place an order, which is why it takes us a bit longer to deliver it to you. Making products on demand instead of in bulk helps reduce overproduction, so thank you for making thoughtful purchasing decisions!
Framed poster -Mouthrinse
This artwork is dedcated to Joy Reid, Rep. Jasmine Crockett, and the countless black women whose powerful voices often face disapproval and disdain. Some seek to sanitize their expressions, to muffle or censor the audacity of immovable black women. They aim to police their messages, stifling the very essence of their truths.
The intersection of identity and societal power structures profoundly influences how voices are received. While America has begun to create space for black women’s perspectives, it remains starkly evident that they still navigate a landscape marked by restrictions and inequities. Black women continue to be punished for being "loud" or for "having an attitude." Yet, to be ‘loud’ is a rallying cry for visibility, and to possess an ‘attitude’ is to challenge a history of invisibility and injustice.
In response, I created a minimalist collage that encapsulates this urgency. To be candid, the insights and wisdom shared by Joy Reid, Rep. Jasmine Crockett, and their contemporaries would be more readily embraced were they to issue forth from a white woman. This observation is not to diminish the struggles faced by white women; they too encounter gender-based oppression and attempts at censorship. However, their voices often find acceptance more fluidly within societal structures.
Artwork Title: Mouthrinse
Medium: Digital Art
© Tamiko Greene. Artworks cannot be reproduced and distributed without permission.