Grace by Kerry Sclafani

$475.00

Grace by Kerry Sclafani is a Giclee print on archival matte fine art paper that is 24 × 16”, unframed. Shipping included.

In the words of the artist:

“ This image captures a woman gracefully suspended in water, evoking the timeless mythology of sirens. In myth, sirens were feared—voices deemed too dangerous, bodies too alluring, their strength mistaken for menace. Yet here, in the quiet depths, the siren is reimagined not as a monster but as an embodiment of grace, resilience, and feminine strength. Her movement is fluid yet commanding, a reminder that femininity holds within it not weakness but a profound, enduring force. The ocean is a space where beauty and danger, softness and power coexist. And just as the ocean can hold many truths at once, so too can women: all at once nurturing, unyielding, alluring, and strong. This image seeks to honor that complexity, to reclaim the siren as a symbol of agency rather than fear, and to let her voice rise from the depths—no longer silenced, but celebrated.”

Grace by Kerry Sclafani is a Giclee print on archival matte fine art paper that is 24 × 16”, unframed. Shipping included.

In the words of the artist:

“ This image captures a woman gracefully suspended in water, evoking the timeless mythology of sirens. In myth, sirens were feared—voices deemed too dangerous, bodies too alluring, their strength mistaken for menace. Yet here, in the quiet depths, the siren is reimagined not as a monster but as an embodiment of grace, resilience, and feminine strength. Her movement is fluid yet commanding, a reminder that femininity holds within it not weakness but a profound, enduring force. The ocean is a space where beauty and danger, softness and power coexist. And just as the ocean can hold many truths at once, so too can women: all at once nurturing, unyielding, alluring, and strong. This image seeks to honor that complexity, to reclaim the siren as a symbol of agency rather than fear, and to let her voice rise from the depths—no longer silenced, but celebrated.”