JackRabbit Superslims
JackRabbit Superslims (2025)
Acrylic on canvas, 24 × 36 in
JackRabbit Superslims continues G.M. Miller’s exploration of fictional cigarette branding as a visual language for addiction. The box is rendered in clean, graphic precision against a stark white field. While formally echoing earlier works, this piece draws its tonal influence from Pulp Fiction—a world where violence, humour, and style coexist without apology.
Built in layered acrylic, the painting emphasizes control, mirroring the deceptive sleekness of addiction itself. The repeated format becomes deliberate: the same object, reimagined, rebranded, but fundamentally unchanged. The small signature at the lower edge reinforces the idea that intention can transform fixation into commentary.
For Miller, the act of remaking this image is not redundancy but ritual. Each version marks another attempt to understand the persistence of craving—to face how temptation returns wearing different costumes, yet always asking the same question.