From a series of twelve silkscreen prints produced with invited artists that share a collective wonder in the natural world and what it means to be receptive to its surprises and liberations.
From a collaborative project and exhibition The Mind is Also a Landscape, presented at Public Land in Sacramento (November 16, 2019 - January 15, 2020). The project featured the work of nine contemporary artists whose varied practices encompass painting, sculpture, printmaking, performance and writing. Among the group, several artists produce work that is discernibly influenced by or produced in concert with the natural world, while for others that relationship is less direct. What is shared is the impulse to be drawn out from the familiar interior of the studio into a freer, less personal landscape of the natural world and to be receptive to its surprises and liberations.From each artist, we requested they share personal photographs from periods of ‘free time’ spent in the outdoors, not engaged in the act of ‘making’ or ‘doing’ but in receptive exploration. We then reproduced a selection of those images in large format as single-color silkscreen prints which, when installed, built a kind of panorama of collective creative experiences undertaken outside of their typical, urban environment in disparate natural locations. In her seminal book Wanderlust: A History of Walking writer Rebecca Solnit proposes that nature can behave as a pace as well as a place. The pace of a person walking allows the natural world to introduce a new time metric, one that is inherently bodily. In many ways The Mind is Also a Landscape offers its own meditation on time; The seasonal and geological time of landscape; The suspension of time within the camera’s frame; The symbiotic relationship of the artists’ time spent inside and outside the space of studio production. To the viewer, the exhibition proposes a consideration of how the natural environment influences artists in immeasurable ways and by extension how it influences all of our lives, our imagination and our wellbeing.
Beverly Acha (b. Miami, Florida) works in a variety of mediums including painting, fresco, and printmaking. Her work has been exhibited at DC Moore Gallery, NYC; LatchKey Gallery, NYC, Rubber Factory, NYC; Underdonk, Brooklyn, NY; El Museo del Barrio, NYC; La MaMa Galleria, NYC; Benaco Arte, Sirmione, Italy; EFA Blackburn 20|20 Gallery, NYC; International Print Center of NY, NYC; the LeRoy Neiman Gallery at Columbia University, NYC; and Smack Mellon, NYC, among others.Her work has been recognized with awards, residencies, and fellowships including the Sharpe-Walentas Studio Program, Aon-CUE Artist Empowerment Award, MacDowell Fellowship, Lighthouse Works Fellowship, Vermont Studio Center Zeta Orionis Fellowship, Wassaic Project Residency and Education Fellowship, Roswell Artist-in-Residence Program, Robert Schoelkopf Memorial Travel Grant, Frederick M. Peyser Prize in Painting, and Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship, among others. Acha attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in 2018 and received her BA from Williams College in 2009 and her MFA from Yale School of Art in 2012.
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Our typical framing practice is to float mount prints with 1-inch of space around the print. This is a method of framing that keeps the art fully visible in the frame and leaves the edges of the cotton papers exposed. A spacer is added to the frame to keep the artwork from touching the plexiglass. Float mounting requires adhering the print to an acid free foam core back or mat board using acid free linen tape.UV-filtering plexiglass is used for all frames, an option that has become the industry standard. Plexiglass is lighter, scratch-resistant & shatter-resistant (essential for shipping). It also provides more UV protection and less glare than glass. Standard Framing – We work with online framing company Simply Framed to offer three standard framing finishes; White, Natural and Black. For those interested in different finishes beyond these three, they can view the full selection of Simply Framed options and email us prior to purchase, allowing us to provide a quote and finalize arrangements. More about the Standard Framing processPremium Framing – We work with Boston-based fine art framers, Adjective Art & Framing to select specific framing options for each of our invited artist editions. Adjective builds custom-made contemporary hardwood frames for artists, collectors, galleries, and museums. Their standard line of moldings are milled from sustainably sourced hardwoods (often Ash, Maple, Walnut or Cherry) that are then custom stained or lacquered. Adjective backs all their frames with sturdy wooden strainers, reinforcing their structure and allowing their profiles to be narrower - an elegant way to present contemporary prints. For those interested in different finishes beyond those we’ve selected, they can view the full offering of finishes from Adjective and email us prior to purchase, allowing us to provide a quote and finalize arrangements. More about the Premium Framing Process
More information about Custom Framing
Beverly Acha (b. Miami, Florida) works in a variety of mediums including painting, fresco, and printmaking. Her work has been exhibited at DC Moore Gallery, NYC; LatchKey Gallery, NYC, Rubber Factory, NYC; Underdonk, Brooklyn, NY; El Museo del Barrio, NYC; La MaMa Galleria, NYC; Benaco Arte, Sirmione, Italy; EFA Blackburn 20|20 Gallery, NYC; International Print Center of NY, NYC; the LeRoy Neiman Gallery at Columbia University, NYC; and Smack Mellon, NYC, among others.Her work has been recognized with awards, residencies, and fellowships including the Sharpe-Walentas Studio Program, Aon-CUE Artist Empowerment Award, MacDowell Fellowship, Lighthouse Works Fellowship, Vermont Studio Center Zeta Orionis Fellowship, Wassaic Project Residency and Education Fellowship, Roswell Artist-in-Residence Program, Robert Schoelkopf Memorial Travel Grant, Frederick M. Peyser Prize in Painting, and Mellon Mays Undergraduate Fellowship, among others. Acha attended the Skowhegan School of Painting and Sculpture in 2018 and received her BA from Williams College in 2009 and her MFA from Yale School of Art in 2012.
Absolutely! Just send us an email of the pieces you’re interested in and we can create. custom shipping quote for you to approve before purchase. Please note that purchasers are responsible for any applicable customs expenses upon arrival.
Yes, all Print Club Ltd. pieces are produced on 100% acid-free cotton paper which means they have a life expectancy of over 1,000 years.
The best way to love your prints and ensure a long, happy life is certainly to have them framed. A high quality frame can prevent damage, fading and also show your prints off in their best possible light. If you are interested in having your print framed through our site, take a look at our framing information.
We’ve found that the best way to avoid damage, prints will arrive carefully packaged in sturdy tubes. A day or two under some heavy books and they'll be nice and flat. However, keep in mind that because of the nature of cotton paper, it will respond to differing levels of humidity in the air. Sometimes paper will lay flat and other times it will slightly ripple. This is natural and a lovely reminder of its physicality as an organic object, embrace its paper personality! If you’re planning to frame your print, just take them rolled up to your framer and they can expertly take care of the flattening process.
We love to work with design professionals and are pleased to now offer free membership to our trade program that includes a 15% discount on unframed works as well as an extended range of works available for purchase. Head to our Trade page to share your details for membership.
If your prints have arrived damaged in any way we will send a replacement free of any charge and pay for your damaged prints to be posted back to us. In the unlikely event that you're not 100% happy with your prints when they arrive we are happy to arrange for replacements to be sent or for store credit on a future purchase.