Shurong Large (36" x 24") - Limited Edition Fine Art Print | Edition of 15
Shurong Large (36" x 24") - Limited Edition Fine Art Print | Edition of 15
Limited Edition Fine Art Print. Atmospheric abstraction in coral, turquoise, and amber.
Large — 36" x 24" paper (30" x 18" image, 3" border) | Edition of 15 | $525
Named for the meditation bell, this work captures the liminal space between stillness and transformation. Created in Procreate, this work draws on Jonathan Herbert's pioneering contributions to digital art—work that has been the subject of university lectures and industry recognition since the 1990s.
The layered digital process allows for subtle adjustments of color, atmosphere, and depth that define Herbert's contemporary practice. Herbert's work is held in The Kinsey Institute Museum, The Paley Center for Media, and Silicon Graphics Permanent Collection. He spoke at SIGGRAPH in 1992 and has exhibited since the 1970s.
Also available in: Small (17" x 12") | Medium (26" x 18") | Extra Large (50" x 32")
Printed on 100% rag archival fine art paper at 300 dpi or higher. Each print is numbered and signed by the artist on the front in pencil. Certificate of authenticity included.
Please note: Free shipping to the 48 contiguous United States only. Alaska, Hawaii, and US territories will incur additional shipping charges. Contact us before ordering for a shipping quote.
All prints are shipped without mats or frames. You are buying the print, and framing will be your own. This is done to manage costs and to allow you to pick the perfect frame for your room.
Jonathan Herbert’s work is a 53-year, sustained investigation into transformation, pursued by any means necessary. His polymathic practice—painting, photography, digital innovation—is a single thread, each discipline informing the others, each obstacle transformed into a creative catalyst.
Forged in 1970s NYC: A major figure in the downtown scene, creating experimental Color Xerox art alongside Cindy Sherman, tagging subways with Jean-Michel Basquiat, and earning the encouragement of photographer Robert Frank.
Pioneer of the Digital Age: Finding he could not paint sober, he became one of the earliest digital art pioneers in 1984. He was sponsored by Silicon Graphics, spoke at SIGGRAPH '92, and mentored a generation of artists who went on to Pixar and Blue Sky Studios.
Alchemist of Trauma: His work unflinchingly documents a life of extreme adversity, including the harrowing Kaddish series, created as his wife was dying of cancer; the Etz Hayim series, drawn during his own toxic chemotherapy; and his current atmospheric abstractions, developed after a traumatic brain injury forced him to invent a new way to paint.
Held in Esteemed Collections: His work is held by The Kinsey Institute, The Paley Center for Media, Pfizer Inc., and the Silicon Graphics Permanent Collection, validating his contribution to both art and science.
Not Dead Yet: Despite severe, progressive cognitive impairment from his injuries, Herbert completed 104 paintings in 2024 alone, a testament to a creative drive that refuses to be extinguished.