COSMOS AND THEOS 2025 Year at a Glance on Premium Matte Paper Calendar with Hanger
COSMOS AND THEOS 2025 Year at a Glance on Premium Matte Paper Calendar with Hanger
Our minimalist wooden hangers are made with four magnetic wooden dowels, two that clamp to the top of your print and two that clamp to the bottom to give a vintage look and feel. The poster is made with heavier-weight white matte paper that has a natural, smooth uncoated finish that feels luxurious to the touch.
While the poster and hangers are packed separately in one box, final assembly is required. Don’t worry; it's a snap to put them together!
Features:
- The hangers are made from pine and come in natural wood, white, black or dark wood.
- The cotton rope attached at the top matches the hanger color.
- Designed magnetically, the hangers do not damage the poster and also makes it easy to switch prints, making it a versatile and durable option.
- The 200 gsm / 80 lb paper weight makes it durable and long-lasting.
- FSC-certified paper and hangers or equivalent certifications, depending on regional availability. It’s better for the people and the planet.
- Each poster and hanger is shipped in robust packaging, ensuring it arrives in pristine condition.
- Paper sizes may vary slightly by region. For the US and Canada, the measurement is in inches, while for the rest of the world, it is in centimeters.
ABOUT THE PAINTING PRINT ON THE CALENDAR:
Cosmos and Theos, acrylic on canvas, 18 X 24 IN.
Charles Darwin once said, “The impossibility of conceiving that this grand and wondrous universe, with our conscious selves, arose through chance, seems to me the chief argument for the existence of God.” It’s attributed to Einstein, the phrase, “The more I study science, the more I am amazed by the complexity of the universe and the more I believe in the existence of a creator.” There’s some dispute about this particular quote but, having read plenty about him and written by him, I can see how these words have plausible authenticity. Anyway, it was with these thoughts in mind that I created this piece because I, too, believe there is no such thing as coincidence.
I don’t necessarily look for purpose in my life, though that’s not a bad thing to have. It’s more that when I look back over my time in this world, I see so many variables, chance encounters and fragmented impossibilities that led me along the way to things I now celebrate… and, yes, the pains and heartbreaks, too. I can’t imagine that all we are, all we experience are just a sum of blindly stumbling through accidents, happy or not. Even drawing our first breaths aren’t only the miracles of life but also invisible atoms meeting atoms and cells forming only to split then growing to repeat the process until we have fingers and toes. At any point, with one alteration, we could be a different person or platypus for that matter. How amazing!
This piece is about that astounding machination which superficially seems messy chaos, the universe within us we can’t see and that great expansive universe beyond which we can only catch in slivering glimpses. Isn’t it funny that we can only witness the truly pristine great order of things through either a micro or macro lens but never in the thick of it?