Portrait Study with Monotype by Katrina Andry
‘Portrait Study with Monotype’ is a limited-edition print featuring work by artist Katrina Andry exploring identity and race through symbols of femininity. In this case, the heirloom pearls handed down by her grandmother serve in questioning her own femininity in relation to how she’s viewed in society as part of a collective of women considered more masculine than feminine based off of superficial features like the broadness of one's shoulders or darkness of one's skin.
Edition of 150, printed on Somerset Velvet paper.
Dimensions: 24”W x 36”H, sold unframed.
Sold exclusively through Sunday Shop, this edition of 150 posters will be printed locally in partnership with Bywater Fine Art Printing and signed by the artist. All proceeds go to the artist and Louisiana Bucket Brigade, a grassroots action to hold the petrochemical industry and government accountable for the true costs of pollution.
Learn more about the Art into Action initiative here.
‘Portrait Study with Monotype’ is a limited-edition print featuring work by artist Katrina Andry exploring identity and race through symbols of femininity. In this case, the heirloom pearls handed down by her grandmother serve in questioning her own femininity in relation to how she’s viewed in society as part of a collective of women considered more masculine than feminine based off of superficial features like the broadness of one's shoulders or darkness of one's skin.
Edition of 150, printed on Somerset Velvet paper.
Dimensions: 24”W x 36”H, sold unframed.
Sold exclusively through Sunday Shop, this edition of 150 posters will be printed locally in partnership with Bywater Fine Art Printing and signed by the artist. All proceeds go to the artist and Louisiana Bucket Brigade, a grassroots action to hold the petrochemical industry and government accountable for the true costs of pollution.
Learn more about the Art into Action initiative here.
‘Portrait Study with Monotype’ is a limited-edition print featuring work by artist Katrina Andry exploring identity and race through symbols of femininity. In this case, the heirloom pearls handed down by her grandmother serve in questioning her own femininity in relation to how she’s viewed in society as part of a collective of women considered more masculine than feminine based off of superficial features like the broadness of one's shoulders or darkness of one's skin.
Edition of 150, printed on Somerset Velvet paper.
Dimensions: 24”W x 36”H, sold unframed.
Sold exclusively through Sunday Shop, this edition of 150 posters will be printed locally in partnership with Bywater Fine Art Printing and signed by the artist. All proceeds go to the artist and Louisiana Bucket Brigade, a grassroots action to hold the petrochemical industry and government accountable for the true costs of pollution.
Learn more about the Art into Action initiative here.
About the Artist
Katrina Andry is a New Orleans-born and based multimedia artist. She challenges the ideology of individualism by examining inequalities and resulting degradation as the result of our color-based prejudices. She argues the belief in individualism allows Americans to turn a blind eye to inequality, suggesting that barriers to well-being lie with the individual—not also within our social structures—in spite of documentation of the collective experiences of these groups and data on outcomes of disfavored groups.