Refund Policy
Tree of Life Art Refund Policy
Thank you for shopping at Tree of Life Art!
Our customized products are made-to-measure items, complaints regarding product quality must be reported within 30 days of purchase to be eligible for a reprint. After the 30 days have passed, you will not be offered a refund and/or exchange of any kind. If, for any reason, your parcel shows obvious signs of transport damage, please refuse delivery and inform us immediately at contact@treeoflifeartshop.com.
Eligibility for Refunds and Exchanges
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Your item must be unused and in the same condition that you received it.
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The item must be in the original packaging.
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To complete your return, we require a receipt or proof of purchase.
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Only regular priced items may be refunded, sale items cannot be refunded.
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If the item in question was marked as a gift when purchased and shipped directly to you, you will receive a gift credit for the value of your return.
Exchanges (if applicable)
We only replace items if they are defective or damaged. If you need to exchange it for the same item, send us an email at contactus@treeoflifeartshop.com and we will be able to promptly assist you.
Once your return is received and inspected, we will send you an email to notify you that we have received your returned item. We will also notify you of the approval or rejection of your refund.
Your refund will then be processed, and a credit will automatically be applied to your credit card or original method of payment.
Thank you!
The Foundation
What Is Livity?
Livity is not a brand name. It is a philosophy of living consciousness — a Rastafari-rooted concept describing the vital force, the divine current that flows through all living things and connects us to our origins. It is the recognition that how we live is a sacred act.
For the Kalinago — the people the colonizers named "Caribs" — the living world was never separate from the ancestral world. The sea, the ceiba tree, the spiral carved into rock: these were not symbols. They were transmissions. Livity is that unbroken signal.
At Livity Tree Art, we carry this Caribbean Aboriginal understanding of sacred life-force into everything we create. Every brushstroke, every garment, every accessory is an act of remembrance — and an act of return.
"The ancestors did not die. They became the frequency we forgot to tune into."
Livity Tree Artists
The Artists Behind the Work
Livity Tree Art is not a brand conceived in a marketing meeting. It is the living continuation of a matrilineal legacy spanning Kalinago St. Vincent, Eritrean royal lineage - grandparent lineages, each carrying sovereign Indigenous identity, spiritual authority, and noble standing that colonial reclassification buried.
The late Anthony Joyette — among the first Black Canadian artists recognized in Montreal — planted a seed that now blooms through Katherin and the entire Livity Tree Art family. His vision of art as resistance, as cultural reclamation, as a transmission to future generations, is the heartbeat of everything we make.
Charlie Andrade
Charlie Andrade
Katherin Joyette
Katherin Joyette
Robert Joyette
Robert Joyette
Rooted in the Caribbean Aboriginal
The Kalinago, Arawak, and Ciboney peoples were the first nations of the islands the world now calls the Caribbean. Their cosmology, matrilineal kinship structures, and earth-based spiritual practices form the living root of Livity Tree Art.
Art as Ancestral Transmission
Our art is not decorative. It is channeled through ceremony, breathwork, meditation, and deep ancestral research. Each piece carries encoded cultural memory — a portal to lineages that colonial history tried to erase.
Living the Culture — Not Displaying It
Livity means the culture lives through you. Not behind glass. Not on a shelf. On your body, in your home, in your daily choices. You are not a museum visitor — you are a living heir.
Your Ancestors
Were Never Lost.
Only Waiting.
Bring them home. Hang them on your walls. Wear them on your skin. Carry them in your accessories. Livity Tree Art exists so that the first peoples of the Americas and Caribbean are never erased again.
Aboriginal Amerindian Art & Culture