What Fresh Hell - Art Print
Monday. Again. Pacific Northwest artist Sherrie's original watercolor bird channels the precise feeling of every Monday morning (or, really, ANY morning these days), every ding of a notification you weren't expecting, and every moment when life delivers yet another creative surprise — with "What Fresh Hell." This relatable, hilarious, and strangely beautiful horizontal print is the funny wall art that many of us desperately need and absolutely deserve. The bird's expression is a masterwork of resigned incredulity, rendered in Sherrie's expressive watercolor style and paired with a phrase that has functioned as a survival mechanism for humans across generations. Printed on 285gsm archival matte paper. A perfect work anniversary gift for the colleague who has earned every single year of their tenure, an essential birthday present for anyone navigating a season of life that requires maximum humor, or a thoughtful coworker gift for the office that needs its shared experience named and celebrated with art — and a little profanity.
Monday. Again. Pacific Northwest artist Sherrie's original watercolor bird channels the precise feeling of every Monday morning (or, really, ANY morning these days), every ding of a notification you weren't expecting, and every moment when life delivers yet another creative surprise — with "What Fresh Hell." This relatable, hilarious, and strangely beautiful horizontal print is the funny wall art that many of us desperately need and absolutely deserve. The bird's expression is a masterwork of resigned incredulity, rendered in Sherrie's expressive watercolor style and paired with a phrase that has functioned as a survival mechanism for humans across generations. Printed on 285gsm archival matte paper. A perfect work anniversary gift for the colleague who has earned every single year of their tenure, an essential birthday present for anyone navigating a season of life that requires maximum humor, or a thoughtful coworker gift for the office that needs its shared experience named and celebrated with art — and a little profanity.