“Always take yourself seriously… it’s not the same as being pompous, or overly self-assured, but it is important to understand that the small little ideas that creep up in your mind, often contain the germ of a much larger project. All great art wasn’t born as great art. It first needed to be recognized by the artist him/herself. Through his or her belief in it, it became true.” — Wolfgang Tillmans
Wolfgang Tillmans (b.1968) Wäscheberg inkjet print mounted on aluminum, in artist’s frame sheet: 36 ½ x 29 ½ in. Price Realised USD 17,500
“Be yourself; everyone else is already taken.” — Oscar Wilde
ศรัทธา เคารพในสติปัญญาของตัวคุณเอง คุณสามารถหลอกคนอื่นได้แต่ไม่สามารถหลอกตัวเองได้ You can lie to others, but you cannot lie to yourself. _ Word Series: A Copy of A Copy Poster
Size: 5400 x 7200 pixels (18 x 24 in.) RGB, JPEG Resolution: 300 pixels/inch
Both physical and NFT items are now available in our store.
The Utilitarianism Series explores aspects of human behavior. I chose to focus on serial killers because they often display a lack of empathy and guilt, and tend to become highly self-centered individuals. These traits are what categorize certain serial killers as psychopaths. Interestingly, serial killers frequently wear a metaphorical “mask of sanity” to conceal their true psychopathic nature and can come across as normal and even charming. It’s fascinating to see how these behaviors, which we sometimes conceal within ourselves, are reflected in such extreme cases. _ In 1990 #Texas, USA, a runaway teenage girl was kidnapped, tortured, and killed. She was terrified and made to pose in front of and inside an old barn before her murder by a serial killer. She was 14.
Utilitarianism Series: The Last Victim 2020 Watercolor on paper 12 x 9 in. Price: Not for Sale 📷: Serial killer
“I believe that who we are, and consequently the work that we make, whether we’re visual artists or writers or journalists or filmmakers, is a projection of where we were born, what’s been withheld or lavished upon us, our color, our sex, our class. And everything we do in life to some degree is a reflection of that context.” — Barbara Kruger
Barbara Kruger Untitled (How come only the unborn have the right to life?) 1986 photograph and type on paper.
“I have found that in accepting and immersing myself in subject matter I paint with more intensity and that the ‘hows’ of painting are more inevitably determined by the ‘whats’.” — David Park
David Park (1911-1960) Two Heads 1959 oil on canvas 24 x 26 in. Price realised USD 1,022,500