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This Month’s Art Print

Satyr & Nymph

This month's piece is a love story — specifically, the one unfolding between a satyr and a nymph at the center of this textile artwork, created using tufted yarn. It's inspired by the 1894 literary poster When Hearts Are Trumps, illustrated by Will H. Bradley.

When I first came across the original image, I assumed Bradley was nodding to the myth of Ampelus and Dionysus: a beautiful satyr whom the god fell deeply in love with, and who, after being killed by a bull, was transformed into the world's first grapevine. A tender, tragic story, and rich visual territory that fits naturally into this body of work.

But as I dug into the history of the image, a different story emerged, and honestly a more charming one. This poster was Bradley's very first commissioned illustration, made for a small publishing house founded by two Harvard students who were still setting up their letterhead. Two ambitious kids with a printing press and a poet to promote. Bradley responded by drawing two young lovers, classical and romantic, reaching toward each other across the page.

I'll admit I see myself in that origin story a little. But what strikes me just as much is the context it was made in. The literary poster was still a developing art form at the time, only just finding its footing in the United States. It wasn't considered high art. It was commercial, it was quick, and its flat graphic style was often dismissed for exactly those reasons.

And yet Bradley kept reaching for classical mythology, for timeless iconography, for images with weight and intention. I can't help but read that as a quiet act of defiance: a belief that the work was worth taking seriously, even when the medium wasn't.

This month's print asks us to question the value of art, which is a question constantly relevant to me. We've all heard the complaints about minimal modern art: a single color flooding a canvas, a few lazy brushstrokes on white. "My three year old could do that." But art is more than a well crafted image. It's a story people buy into, and a layer of compelling history that gives it its allure.

A detailed drawing of a classical statue's face with curly hair, looking thoughtfully into the distance, with a green and blue background.

The Art Archive of 2026.

Two vintage style greeting cards with floral stamps and handwritten text, resting on crumpled paper.
Handwritten letters and envelopes with floral stamps, placed on crumpled brown paper and a wooden surface.
Two kraft paper envelopes decorated with pressed flowers and handwritten notes, placed on crumpled paper and a wooden surface.
A postcard with a postage stamp featuring a watercolor illustration of a blue and purple flowering plant, with handwritten text and a floral illustration at the top, surrounded by watercolor paintings in blues and greens.
Several handwritten letters on different types of paper, along with an envelope stamped with a flower design, a small yellow flower, and a wooden disc used as a coaster, all arranged on crumpled brown paper.
Close-up photo of vintage letters with floral stamps and handwritten script, placed on crumpled paper and a wooden surface.
Close-up of a handwritten letter with a flower postage stamp and watercolor paintings in the background.

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By joining the Collector's Club, you will receive one collectible art print per month, delivered from the studio of Tommy Carmelo Valenti right to your doorstep. Additional perks included. (Cancel anytime).


✓ 1 photo-sized (5x7) artwork per month, delivered to doorstep
✓ Access to Collector-Only limited edition pieces
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