Lilith

$80.00

Lilith
Medium: Sublimated prints on floating cards, matted and framed
Size: 9 x 25 framed

Lilith is a tribute to the women who shaped an era with vulnerability, intellect, and unapologetic power. Featuring Sarah McLachlan, Natalie Merchant, Indigo Girls, Fiona Apple, and Tracy Chapman, this piece honors the voices that defined the Lilith Fair generation and carved space for female storytelling in a male-dominated industry.

Each sublimated card floats against a rich matte backdrop, creating breathing room around every portrait—like verses in a carefully sequenced album. The elongated 9 x 25 frame gives the piece a cinematic, almost stage-like presence, allowing each artist to stand alone while remaining part of a collective force.

These are not just singers—they are writers, truth-tellers, and architects of emotional honesty. Their music carried confession, protest, poetry, and defiance. Soft did not mean weak. Acoustic did not mean quiet. Their power lived in lyric, harmony, and conviction.

Lilith is both homage and time capsule—a framed reminder of a movement that proved women’s voices were not a genre, but a revolution.*

Lilith
Medium: Sublimated prints on floating cards, matted and framed
Size: 9 x 25 framed

Lilith is a tribute to the women who shaped an era with vulnerability, intellect, and unapologetic power. Featuring Sarah McLachlan, Natalie Merchant, Indigo Girls, Fiona Apple, and Tracy Chapman, this piece honors the voices that defined the Lilith Fair generation and carved space for female storytelling in a male-dominated industry.

Each sublimated card floats against a rich matte backdrop, creating breathing room around every portrait—like verses in a carefully sequenced album. The elongated 9 x 25 frame gives the piece a cinematic, almost stage-like presence, allowing each artist to stand alone while remaining part of a collective force.

These are not just singers—they are writers, truth-tellers, and architects of emotional honesty. Their music carried confession, protest, poetry, and defiance. Soft did not mean weak. Acoustic did not mean quiet. Their power lived in lyric, harmony, and conviction.

Lilith is both homage and time capsule—a framed reminder of a movement that proved women’s voices were not a genre, but a revolution.*