20151220

Vulture

    vul·ture
    ˈvəlCHər/
    noun
    noun: vulture; plural noun: vultures; noun: Old World vulture; plural noun: Old World vultures; noun: New World vulture; plural noun: New World vultures
    1. 1.
      a large bird of prey with the head and neck more or less bare of feathers, feeding chiefly on carrion and reputed to gather with others in anticipation of the death of a sick or injured animal or person.
    2. 2.
      a contemptible person who preys on or exploits others.
      synonyms:predatorsharkvampire,bloodsuckerprofiteer,racketeeropportunist,extortionist
      "these ambulance chasers are vultures"
    Origin
    late Middle English: from Anglo-Norman French vultur, from Latin vulturius .

20151215

slate

Rock rocks. Slate takes paint very well. This is hanging in a wonderful house amongst a wonderful collection of art.

20151214

Metable

Oh the times we had. Terrible times. Im a horrible twat. A gross troll. Card board prince. straw manchild. I'd take it back if I could. Doesnt change a damn thing. Im a scumbag. And a hack to boot.

20151212

Lostart

There are a lot of paintings out there MIA. A lot of friends MIA. It's sad. :(

20151209

Making money

Did a collab with Pierre Pressure and honnaman (hope I spelled that right..)

20151111

tlaltecuhtli

from wikipedia:
Tlaltecuhtli [t͡ɬaɬteˈkʷt͡ɬi] is a pre-Columbian Mesoamerican deity, identified from sculpture and iconography dating to the Late Postclassic period of Mesoamerican chronology (ca. 1200–1519), primarily among the Mexica(Aztec) and other Nahuatl-speaking cultures. Tlaltecuhtli is also known from several post-conquest manuscripts that surveyed Mexica mythology and belief systems, such as the Histoyre du méchique compiled in the mid-16th century.[1]
According to Alfonso Caso[2] There were four earth gods - Tlaltecuhti who was male and three earth goddesses - CoatliqueCihuacoatl and Tlazolteotl. In one of the Mexica creation accounts Tlaltecuhtli is described as a sea monster who dwelled in the ocean after the fourth Great Flood, an embodiment of the raging chaos before creation.[3] Quetzalcoatl and Tezcatlipoca, in the form of serpents, tore him in half, throwing half upwards to create the sky and stars and leaving the other half to become the land of the earth. He remained alive, however, and demanded human blood.
Although the deity's name is masculine in Nahuatl, some modern scholars, notably Miller and Taube interpret some representations of Tlaltecuhtli as exhibiting female characteristics, particularly his typical pose which they interpret as the characteristic position of a woman giving birth.[4] According to Miller and Taube p. 167: "Tlaltecuhtli literally means "earth Lord," but most Aztec representations clearly depict this creature as female, and despite the male gender of the name, some sources call Tlaltecuhtli a goddess. Usually in a hocker, or birth-giving squat, with head flung backwards and her mouth of flint blades open..." Miller and Taube provide an extensive bibliography but use no footnotes so it's impossible to know what sources identify Tlaltecuhtli as a female figure. They identify their main source for Aztec mythology as the Florentine codex however Book 1 of the codex, the Gods, does not include this god.[5] Since Miller and Taube does not refer to primary or secondary sources, one must consider the fact that their identification of Tlaltecuhtli as female is their interpretation of the iconography. Other scholars think that this pose is him crouching under the earth, mouth open, waiting to devour the dead.[6]
According to Alfonso Caso, in the Bodley Codex he was born in a flaming tree Caso. p. 25-26: I-III who is "Sun Ornament", but later his child is called Tlaltecutli (Earth Lord.) He became an Earth Lord when according to Miller and Taube, he was torn apart and his parts were taken to Earth.
Recently a monolith of the deity was unearthed in Mexico City.[7]

20150313

dear me

march. im going nowhere fast. maybe I die this year. you never know.

20150214

vd

eat my heart out

20150117

digital black

Do you like boorish, poorly photoshopped, pixelated, small photographs of shitty dark scratches? BOY ARE YOU IN LUCK.

20150116

everything dying all of the time

nobody reads this. I wouldn't.

 I have been thinking about taking this website down entirely, and even going as far as to remove any evidence of my art from the internet.. i like being non-famous in a world where everyones art and vanity and hopes is on the internet for the world to see.. being even more unseen and getting offline, is very desirable in more than a few compelling  ways. 

I'm not becoming  a better person/artist, just worse. time to quit while you're aware of how much you suck? because I've seen it firsthand people, there comes a time when its so far gone that you don't realize you're out of touch. but maybe I've never been in touch to begin with.