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Gullah Geechee art for the homes that remember the Sea Islands. Painted in a Black-owned studio in the tradition Synthia Saint James, Sonja Griffin Evans, and Amiri Farris have carried for a generation. Sweetgrass baskets, praise houses, the conjure women, the Geechee tongue still spoken on Sapelo and St. Helena. Reproduced on museum-grade giclée canvas made to last a hundred years.
Gullah Geechee Flag and Geechee Heritage Art
Gullah Geechee flag art for the descendants of the Sea Islands. The blue field, the star, the symbol that names a people who built a culture on the islands and waterways from Wilmington to Jacksonville. Geechee heritage art rooted in real history, not exoticized, not flattened. Reproduced on archival cotton canvas in deep blues and ochres. Painted by hand, signed, ready to hang.
Sweetgrass Basket Art and Conjure Woman Canvas
Sweetgrass basket art for the walls that honor the women who held the culture together. The weavers of Mt. Pleasant and the Sapelo women still coiling the same grass their grandmothers coiled. Conjure woman canvas portraits in the visual lineage of Sea Island spirituality, the root doctors, the midwives, the keepers of the old African medicine carried across the water. Painted by hand on archival cotton canvas, the lineage named, the work reverent.
Synthia Saint James and Conjure Woman Portraits
Synthia Saint James helped define the visual language of Gullah Geechee art with her flat-color, figure-forward portraits and conjure-woman imagery. The collection sits in conversation with her work and with the Sea Island painters who came up around her. Reproduced on museum-grade giclée canvas, sized for the gallery wall or the long hallway. Painted by hand in a Black-owned studio, the lineage honored, the source named.
Geechee Language and Sea Island Spiritual Tradition
Geechee language art for those who carry the words their elders carried. The creole still spoken on St. Helena, Daufuskie, and Sapelo, the only African-descended language born in the United States that survived intact. Praise house art, ring shout imagery, indigo vat scenes, the spiritual tradition the Sea Islands kept alive when the mainland tried to make them forget. Reproduced on archival cotton canvas, stretched on solid wood, ready to hang.
Sonja Griffin Evans and Amiri Farris Tradition
Sonja Griffin Evans and Amiri Farris carry the Gullah tradition forward in saturated color and bold figuration, Beaufort to Hilton Head and beyond. The work in this collection lives in their lineage, reverent to the source, painted by a Black artist who learned the culture by listening. Reproduced on archival cotton canvas, stretched on solid wood, ready to hang straight from the box.
