$39.99
Sale price
$39.99
Regular price
Shipping calculated at checkout.
"Mother Earth" is the Black mother earth art print that stops you with its full-spectrum spiritual force—Antionette Simmons Hodges paints the divine feminine as a figure woven from the cosmos itself, her form radiating rainbow light against deep blues and golds in a mixed-media collage that honors the sacred bond between Black womanhood and the living world. This is Afrofuturist art at its most generous: ancient reverence and contemporary vision arriving in the same breath.
Hodges built "Mother Earth" from layers of collage, paint, and pattern, using the accumulative technique she brings to her most spiritually charged works. The figure at the center is simultaneously rooted and celestial—her arms extended, her colors cascading outward in a chromatic embrace that encompasses the full visible spectrum. The rainbow palette is not decorative here; it is symbolic, connecting the goddess figure to traditions of divine light across African and Afrodiasporic spiritual practice while speaking with directness to contemporary conversations about the sacredness of the earth and the women who carry its memory.
This is art that holds space. It does not demand interpretation—it offers presence. Hang "Mother Earth" where you need a centering force: a living room, a meditation space, a creative studio, or a bedroom where you begin and end each day. It makes a profound gift for anyone who moves through the world with awareness of their spiritual rootedness—ideal for birthdays, housewarmings, Mother's Day, and any occasion that calls for something genuinely transcendent.
This archival-quality giclée print is produced on premium cotton rag paper using museum-grade inks that preserve the full luminosity of Hodges's rainbow palette. Available in sizes from 9×7" to 19×15", with select sizes featuring an optional ½" white margin for easy framing.
Antionette Simmons Hodges has spent decades creating art that honors the spiritual and cultural life of African American and Afrodiasporic communities—bring "Mother Earth" home and let her radiance fill the room.