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Reflections

  • Regular price $280.00
Vessels of Holding Series | Lizzie Pannell 2025
  • Limited edition print series of 30
  • Printed onto Hahnemuhle photo rag 308gsm paper
  • Hand signed and numbered
  • Free shipping within NZ
  • Pick up is available at Art For Art Sake who can advise on framing options.

All prints must be ordered via our website.

Sizing & Borders

Each artwork is scaled to fit the selected paper size while preserving its original proportions.

A minimum 15mm white border is included for handling and framing
Due to the artwork’s proportions, border widths may vary slightly on different sides and between sizes
The full image is always visible (no cropping)

There are two options for receiving your print - by courier or collection in person in Wellington.

  • By courier, the print comes safely packaged and rolled in a sturdy tube. It ships within 5-7 business days sent via NZ Post. Delivery times depend on destination.

  • Local collection is available in Wellington at Art For Art Sake in Marion St, Te Aro. The print would come safely packaged flat with a cardboard backing. Art for Arts Sake can frame for you at a discounted rate if you wish, charged separately according to your framing requirements.
Size Guide

Don't wait, 30 item(s) left in stock!

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Local Pickup
Available at Art For Art Sake, 20 Marion St, Wellington who can advise on framing options.
Free shipping within NZ

To live is to hold joy and sorrow in the same hands

Reflections

In Reflections, a deep green void surrounds a luminous glass that holds a delicate trio: a white daisy, a pink chrysanthemum, and a stem of red berries. Each element carries its own quiet symbolism; the daisy suggesting innocence and purity, the chrysanthemum embodying honour and love, and the berries evoking blood and sacrifice. Together, they form a fragile constellation of emotion and meaning, held in tension within the same glass body.

The composition is serene, yet within the vessel’s mirrored surface a flurry of distorted light and colour creates a quiet intensity. The reflections are alive, chaotic, vibrant, unpredictable, standing in contrast to the tranquil backdrop. This unlikely pairing of blooms and berries, differing in size, colour, and temperament, suggests interdependence: how a single vessel, like the human body or psyche, must sustain many varying needs and emotions.

There is tenderness here, but also unease, a harmony built from difference, held together by the transparent vessel that both contains and reveals. In this way, Reflections becomes a meditation on empathy, resilience, and the complex act of carrying both beauty and burden within a single, fragile form.