Agua Es Vida
Signed and numbered serigraph print. This is a four color CYMK process with the original image taken from a photograph of a temporary mural for the El Paso Museum of Art in El Paso Texas, in 2016. This print is the only reproduction of this mural that no longer exists. The print was produced by The Desert Triangle Print Carpet and printed by Taller 75 Grades in Mexico City. It was hard pulled and printed with oil based inks, for precision and longevity of color. This is a limited edition of 50.
Between Albuquerque and El Paso is a single boy of water that has united us for centuries. It is the Rio Grande River, also known as the Rio Bravo, Too Ba’aadii, and Kotsoi. This river has sustained generations of indigenous people from Colorado to the Gulf of Mexico, acting as an important life force for irrigation and trade route to the north. Today, because of dams, shifty negations of water rights, and over consumption, only 20% of the once thriving river makes it to the Gulf of Mexico and the people along the way. This mural honored the historical and traditional connection we have to water. It is sacred, and it is what connects us all. This print honors our relationship with water and celebrates the understanding that water gives us life.
Paper Size 15” x 32” Image Size 9.5” x 28”
Signed and numbered serigraph print. This is a four color CYMK process with the original image taken from a photograph of a temporary mural for the El Paso Museum of Art in El Paso Texas, in 2016. This print is the only reproduction of this mural that no longer exists. The print was produced by The Desert Triangle Print Carpet and printed by Taller 75 Grades in Mexico City. It was hard pulled and printed with oil based inks, for precision and longevity of color. This is a limited edition of 50.
Between Albuquerque and El Paso is a single boy of water that has united us for centuries. It is the Rio Grande River, also known as the Rio Bravo, Too Ba’aadii, and Kotsoi. This river has sustained generations of indigenous people from Colorado to the Gulf of Mexico, acting as an important life force for irrigation and trade route to the north. Today, because of dams, shifty negations of water rights, and over consumption, only 20% of the once thriving river makes it to the Gulf of Mexico and the people along the way. This mural honored the historical and traditional connection we have to water. It is sacred, and it is what connects us all. This print honors our relationship with water and celebrates the understanding that water gives us life.
Paper Size 15” x 32” Image Size 9.5” x 28”
Signed and numbered serigraph print. This is a four color CYMK process with the original image taken from a photograph of a temporary mural for the El Paso Museum of Art in El Paso Texas, in 2016. This print is the only reproduction of this mural that no longer exists. The print was produced by The Desert Triangle Print Carpet and printed by Taller 75 Grades in Mexico City. It was hard pulled and printed with oil based inks, for precision and longevity of color. This is a limited edition of 50.
Between Albuquerque and El Paso is a single boy of water that has united us for centuries. It is the Rio Grande River, also known as the Rio Bravo, Too Ba’aadii, and Kotsoi. This river has sustained generations of indigenous people from Colorado to the Gulf of Mexico, acting as an important life force for irrigation and trade route to the north. Today, because of dams, shifty negations of water rights, and over consumption, only 20% of the once thriving river makes it to the Gulf of Mexico and the people along the way. This mural honored the historical and traditional connection we have to water. It is sacred, and it is what connects us all. This print honors our relationship with water and celebrates the understanding that water gives us life.
Paper Size 15” x 32” Image Size 9.5” x 28”