"Emor" Print
Prints are archival quality Giclee prints. Paper prints take 2-4 business days plus shipping and canvas prints take 5-7 days plus shipping. Custom sizes and rush options are available, please contact us for details!
Paper is 340g, Bright White, water-resistant velvet fine art paper made from 100% cotton fiber and is acid and lignin free. Extremely thick durable paper for premium archival prints.
Canvas has a 1.5” gallery wrap and satin finish.
Emor
In this week’s Parsha, Emor, after the clear delineation of lines and spaces, we read a painful story. Two Jews--one, the son of an Egyptian man, and the other, the son of two Israelite parents fought in the camp. The son of the Egyptian man pronounced the name of G!d as a curse. Because cursing G!d’s name is a serious offense, Moshe decides that the mekalel/blasphemer is to be stoned to death. What drove him to curse G!d’s name? A Midrash imagines that the man was trying to find a place in the camp for his tent, when the other man came and told him that since you are supposed to camp according to the tribe of your father (not your mother) that he wasn’t welcome there. His curse was from a deep place of pain and anguish of being pushed to the outskirts. How can we find space for the people and parts of ourselves that don’t seem to fit? When we can’t find the room within ourselves, may we be blessed with the ability to borrow some space from the Infinite One.
Prints are archival quality Giclee prints. Paper prints take 2-4 business days plus shipping and canvas prints take 5-7 days plus shipping. Custom sizes and rush options are available, please contact us for details!
Paper is 340g, Bright White, water-resistant velvet fine art paper made from 100% cotton fiber and is acid and lignin free. Extremely thick durable paper for premium archival prints.
Canvas has a 1.5” gallery wrap and satin finish.
Emor
In this week’s Parsha, Emor, after the clear delineation of lines and spaces, we read a painful story. Two Jews--one, the son of an Egyptian man, and the other, the son of two Israelite parents fought in the camp. The son of the Egyptian man pronounced the name of G!d as a curse. Because cursing G!d’s name is a serious offense, Moshe decides that the mekalel/blasphemer is to be stoned to death. What drove him to curse G!d’s name? A Midrash imagines that the man was trying to find a place in the camp for his tent, when the other man came and told him that since you are supposed to camp according to the tribe of your father (not your mother) that he wasn’t welcome there. His curse was from a deep place of pain and anguish of being pushed to the outskirts. How can we find space for the people and parts of ourselves that don’t seem to fit? When we can’t find the room within ourselves, may we be blessed with the ability to borrow some space from the Infinite One.
Prints are archival quality Giclee prints. Paper prints take 2-4 business days plus shipping and canvas prints take 5-7 days plus shipping. Custom sizes and rush options are available, please contact us for details!
Paper is 340g, Bright White, water-resistant velvet fine art paper made from 100% cotton fiber and is acid and lignin free. Extremely thick durable paper for premium archival prints.
Canvas has a 1.5” gallery wrap and satin finish.
Emor
In this week’s Parsha, Emor, after the clear delineation of lines and spaces, we read a painful story. Two Jews--one, the son of an Egyptian man, and the other, the son of two Israelite parents fought in the camp. The son of the Egyptian man pronounced the name of G!d as a curse. Because cursing G!d’s name is a serious offense, Moshe decides that the mekalel/blasphemer is to be stoned to death. What drove him to curse G!d’s name? A Midrash imagines that the man was trying to find a place in the camp for his tent, when the other man came and told him that since you are supposed to camp according to the tribe of your father (not your mother) that he wasn’t welcome there. His curse was from a deep place of pain and anguish of being pushed to the outskirts. How can we find space for the people and parts of ourselves that don’t seem to fit? When we can’t find the room within ourselves, may we be blessed with the ability to borrow some space from the Infinite One.