NB Bananas

from $35.00

This bright bold art is perfect for bringing playful energy into your space. As part of a collection that explores gender identity, these pieces were designed to be paired for even greater impact when declaring something about yourself or your world view.  ❤️🏳️‍🌈❤️

Use the drop downs below to choose your design and sizing 

This art is available as a high quality Giclée Print on Premium Archival Smooth Matte Fine Art Paper.  The 230 gsm paper is acid free and archival quality so it can be displayed or stored for many years without yellowing.

Please note these prints are made to order and production time is 2-3 days.  Shipping will take 7-10 days.  The cost of shipping is included.

Design:
Format:

This bright bold art is perfect for bringing playful energy into your space. As part of a collection that explores gender identity, these pieces were designed to be paired for even greater impact when declaring something about yourself or your world view.  ❤️🏳️‍🌈❤️

Use the drop downs below to choose your design and sizing 

This art is available as a high quality Giclée Print on Premium Archival Smooth Matte Fine Art Paper.  The 230 gsm paper is acid free and archival quality so it can be displayed or stored for many years without yellowing.

Please note these prints are made to order and production time is 2-3 days.  Shipping will take 7-10 days.  The cost of shipping is included.

More about this Collection

Fruity explores how gender is projected and perceived while referencing the history of still life painting and playing on the cultural association between bananas and sexual anatomy.  Commercial bananas reproduce asexually via underground rhizomes and the seedless fruit is essentially genderless, but their form is often read through a gendered lens shaped by a culturally constructed narrative. These paintings play on that tendency, challenging viewers to recognize how gendered assumptions are constructed, not inherent. The banana is not male or female. It’s not inherently sensual or erotic. It is just a banana.  

As a non-binary person living in a time where gender identity is debated and politicized in a way that is scary and dehumanizing, this work is personal.  The paintings are a visual invitation to think more deeply about the narratives we build and the assumptions we make in perceiving each other.