Squeeze 'em - Print

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Cher Kalberer, Squeeze 'em, 2019, Watercolor, 8x8 (Large).jpg
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SqueezeEm-Art-Print-8x8-Natural-Frame-Kitchen.jpg
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Cher Kalberer, Squeeze 'em, 2019, Watercolor, 8x8 (Large).jpg

Squeeze 'em - Print

$200.00

Drawn taught against the plump surface, the urge to touch them is irresistible.

Limited-Edition Print
Framed, Ready-to-hang

by C. Kalberer, 2020
8” x 8” Matted Art Print
12.75” x 12.75” frame exterior
Your choice of frame color
Non-glare acrylic*

*Non-glare acrylic - Blocks 99% of UV rays to protect sensitive colors from fading, and is shatter-resistant.

Frame Color:
Quantity:
Add To Cart

Provenance

To preserve authenticity, a certificate accompanies every print. This document — signed by the artist — verifies the edition number and preserves the provenance of the limited art reproduction. This will be mailed separately to you from the studio.

Domestic & International Shipping

Please allow up to 3-12 days for print production and framing. Due to Covid, production and shipping times may be longer. When it’s ready, we will update you when your order has shipped with an estimated delivery date. International orders take longer to ship, please allow up to one extra week.

Return Policy

All print orders are custom made and therefore considered final. That said, if you’re not satisfied with your purchase for any reason, let us know within 14 days and we'll refund your print purchase.

 
 

F$$k Them Bees Series

Disneyland’s Monsanto House of the Future was built in 1957 to demonstrate plastic’s versatility. Closed in 1967, demolition crews tried wrecking balls, torches, chain saws and jackhammers, finally crushing the home into small pieces, using choker chains. The giant steel bolts to mount the house into the foundation broke prior to the structure itself [1]. Plastic is inextricably linked to modernity in our lives. There would be no modern world without The Magnificent Seven—PET, HDPE, LDPE, PP, PS, PUR & PMMA [2].

In 1937, an accidental drop of acid in Otto Bayer’s polyurethane revolutionized our comfort with soft foam [3]. Synthetic plastic resin in plywood makes it harder, stronger and lighter than traditional wood [4]. Injection molding developed the ability to make any shape faster [5].

Wallace Hume Carothers at Dupont replaced silk with yoga pants by a long chain polymer known as nylon [6]. Low density polyethylene was stretched thin to wrap around meat, produce and baked goods [7]. People learned from nature and evolved it. The shell of a turtle is in fact a natural polymer [8]. John Wesley Hyatt created celluloid as a replacement for ivory, saving the elephants [9].

Henry Ford created the futuristic hemp car in 1941, designed to run on hemp fuel and made of agricultural plastic. The car body and fenders were made of hemp fiber, wheat straw and corn to ration steel for WWII. This plastic was phenol formaldehyde (PF) [10], a resin that can biodegrade with white rot fungus [11].

The second World War created an abundance of plastic [12], 90% of which was never recycled [13]. It is indestructible and lingers for centuries, only breaking down into microplastics. The drama of plastic is that it is an impenetrable wall for the cycle of life.

That which doesn’t kill us makes us stronger.

Footnotes

1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monsanto_House_of_the_Future
2 https://www.polymersolutions.com/blog/modern-life-and-plastics/
3 https://innovations.hennecke-group.com/en/112/definitely-nothing-sneer-worldwide-success-story-polyurethane
4 http://www.open.ac.uk/about/broadcast-media-sales/tv-sales/science-technology/everyday-miracles
5 http://www.open.ac.uk/about/broadcast-media-sales/tv-sales/science-technology/everyday-miracles
6 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wallace_Carothers
7 https://www.polymersolutions.com/blog/modern-life-and-plastics/
8 https://www.gia.edu/doc/SP06A3.pdf
9 https://zerowastezone.blogspot.com/2019/10/plastics-double-edged-sword.html
10 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soybean_car
11 https://botit.botany.wisc.edu/toms_fungi/gusse_et_al_phenolic_resins.pdf
12 https://www.plasticstoday.com/business/design-world-war-ii-plastics-and-npe
13 https://www.latimes.com/opinion/story/2020-02-21/plastic-waste-never-recycled-u-s

About the Artist

Cher Kalberer has been drawing since childhood in an underwhelming suburban town. Her talents granted her a scholarship to attend the prestigious Rhode Island School of Design. Only painting when in the best of moods to not compromise the quality of her art, she beams positivity into her work. Holding traditional mastery to high esteem, her influences are Matisse, Sargent, Audubon, Da Vinci, Vermeer among others. Read more

Medium Choice

Gouache, an opaque watercolor, is selected for its fluid, transformative properties. Historically this medium was feminized and seen as lesser. However, the feminine is creation and responsible for birth and nurturing life. It is immediate and requires a decisive hand. The marks are indelible and cannot be easily covered. Water is what gives this medium its transparent properties and fluid movement. The layers compound into countless organic possibilities.