"Mtčw̓è ‘Balsamroot’ Indicator" Archival Pigment Print
Title: Mtčw̓è ‘Balsamroot’ Indicator
Medium: Archival pigment print, Canson Infinity Arches 88 – an ultra-smooth, archival, 100% cotton paper renowned for its brilliance, longevity, and museum-quality craftsmanship.
Original Artwork Information
Medium: Antique 1892 Montana Map, colored pencil, ink, copic markers, acrylic paint
Dimensions: 14” x 20.5”
Year Created: 2024
Location: Currently on sale at the Radius Gallery in Missoula, MT
Artwork Description:
This piece depicts one of our Salish cultural indicators throughout seasonal cycles. When our first food of the year, balsamroot, begins to bloom, it indicates the elk are calving, and bitterroot is ready for harvest. I’ve depicted a woman on horseback, with a beaded bag featuring bitterroot, heading out to gather. Celebrating our ancestral knowledge, traditions, and the cycles that guide us forward.
Printed on Canson Infinity Arches 88 with archival pigment inks, this fine art print preserves the intricate detail and vibrant colors of the original artwork, offering a museum-quality reproduction that honors the story it tells.
Features:
Unframed: This print is sold unframed and carefully rolled in a durable tube to ensure safe delivery and preservation during transit.
Shipping Included
Title: Mtčw̓è ‘Balsamroot’ Indicator
Medium: Archival pigment print, Canson Infinity Arches 88 – an ultra-smooth, archival, 100% cotton paper renowned for its brilliance, longevity, and museum-quality craftsmanship.
Original Artwork Information
Medium: Antique 1892 Montana Map, colored pencil, ink, copic markers, acrylic paint
Dimensions: 14” x 20.5”
Year Created: 2024
Location: Currently on sale at the Radius Gallery in Missoula, MT
Artwork Description:
This piece depicts one of our Salish cultural indicators throughout seasonal cycles. When our first food of the year, balsamroot, begins to bloom, it indicates the elk are calving, and bitterroot is ready for harvest. I’ve depicted a woman on horseback, with a beaded bag featuring bitterroot, heading out to gather. Celebrating our ancestral knowledge, traditions, and the cycles that guide us forward.
Printed on Canson Infinity Arches 88 with archival pigment inks, this fine art print preserves the intricate detail and vibrant colors of the original artwork, offering a museum-quality reproduction that honors the story it tells.
Features:
Unframed: This print is sold unframed and carefully rolled in a durable tube to ensure safe delivery and preservation during transit.
Shipping Included
Title: Mtčw̓è ‘Balsamroot’ Indicator
Medium: Archival pigment print, Canson Infinity Arches 88 – an ultra-smooth, archival, 100% cotton paper renowned for its brilliance, longevity, and museum-quality craftsmanship.
Original Artwork Information
Medium: Antique 1892 Montana Map, colored pencil, ink, copic markers, acrylic paint
Dimensions: 14” x 20.5”
Year Created: 2024
Location: Currently on sale at the Radius Gallery in Missoula, MT
Artwork Description:
This piece depicts one of our Salish cultural indicators throughout seasonal cycles. When our first food of the year, balsamroot, begins to bloom, it indicates the elk are calving, and bitterroot is ready for harvest. I’ve depicted a woman on horseback, with a beaded bag featuring bitterroot, heading out to gather. Celebrating our ancestral knowledge, traditions, and the cycles that guide us forward.
Printed on Canson Infinity Arches 88 with archival pigment inks, this fine art print preserves the intricate detail and vibrant colors of the original artwork, offering a museum-quality reproduction that honors the story it tells.
Features:
Unframed: This print is sold unframed and carefully rolled in a durable tube to ensure safe delivery and preservation during transit.
Shipping Included
Prints made by Paper & Ink Studio
Located in Missoula, Montana
Canson Certified Print Lab
We recommend that when framing, always ask for UV protected glass. Most ready-made frames from discount stores do not come with UV glass. It is not very expensive to go to your local glass or frame shop and purchase the glass separately. Avoid having your glass positioned directly against your prints as a permanent display option. Monitors are transmissive with regards to light and prints are reflective. This means that your prints will always look slightly different as the experience of viewing the image is different. We strive to replicate the original artwork. If you are having your prints framed by a professional framer they can put your prints in a press for a few seconds and your prints will flatten right away.