The Last Thing I Saw – Giclée numbered edition print

$50.00

This is a numbered and signed edition print of The Last Thing I Saw, limited to 50 prints. Each print is professionally produced using archival-quality paper and inks to ensure lasting vibrancy and durability. This 11″x 14″ print will fit in a standard 11X14 frame or 16X20 with mat.

48 in stock

Description

A surreal digital artwork viewed from a dramatic low angle, looking up into a towering, hexagonal gothic structure adorned with kaleidoscopic stained glass and star-shaped architectural patterns. At the top, a small child leans over the ledge, reaching down with a hand extended in desperation or helplessness. Below, large pale hands and dark, tangled hair dominate the foreground—revealing a person falling downward, their body just out of frame, suggesting an irreversible descent. The scene is bathed in cold blue light, heightening the sense of sorrow, finality, and helpless distance between the figures.
The Last Thing I Saw

 

This is a numbered and signed edition print of The Last Thing I Saw, limited to a maximum of 50 prints. You will receive the next available number in the edition. Each print is professionally produced using archival-quality paper and inks to ensure lasting vibrancy and durability. This 11″x 14″ print will fit in a standard 11X14 frame or 16X20 with mat.

Artist statement about the piece:

The Last Thing I Saw is one of my most personal pieces—a digital collage that speaks to the pain, fear, and reverberating sorrow surrounding suicide. It reflects not only my own experience surviving a suicide attempt but also the emotional aftermath witnessed by seeing my child’s attempt, and the tragic loss of my mother-in-law, who did not survive her
attempt. In creating this work, I wanted to strip away metaphor and show something real—not romanticized or symbolic, but tangible and disorienting. The downward-pointing hands—mine—are swallowed by shadows and tangled hair. The hands above grasp a ledge, barely clinging to a reality that seems too far away. Above it all is a ceiling that looks divine, unreachable, distant—evoking a place I almost went, a place someone I loved did. This piece is about devastation. Not just the act, but its ripple effect. It’s about the impossible grief of those left behind, and the silent legacy suicide can leave in a family. But it’s also about witnessing. About saying: this happened, and it matters. By confronting it, perhaps we can begin to speak honestly, to support each other better, and to recognize the deep, silent wounds that so often go unseen.

Additional information

Dimensions 12 × 15 × .5 in

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