The Tiger Trilogy
This is a collection gathering the first three prints in the Tiger Series. They are:
These things we chase...
This piece, as most of mine, is heavily allegorical and tied to a very particular time in my life. A mindset, rather, and I painted to remind myself of the virtues and the traps of ambition. It also marks the return of the Read Thread! If you've been with me long enough, you remember it. If it doesn't ring a bell, go take a look at the Birds & Bones collection. It's also my first mammal as the main focus of a print and my first piece using this particular colour palette, which I fucking love! That's a lot of firsts and returns and things. I'm excited about this print, if you couldn't tell. And I know you're excited too, even if it’s just a little bit. So, go on. Add it to the cart.
These things we fear...
As much as “Chase” is about desire, this one is about fear, and as much as “Chase” points the finger at the perils of that desire, this one shines a light on the small deaths we all go through and how they are a necessary part of living. Yeah, we die to live again as something, someone different. So let’s not fear, and let’s not tarry. Let’s go into it with our eyes open, and maybe we’ll catch a glimpse of the in-between, so when we wake up (after a decision, a long night’s sleep, a tragedy, or an actual death), we are richer and stronger, and better beings.
These things we are...
Now we face the music and the conflict, the prize and the trap. This piece touches on and ties (no pun intended) a lot of the themes and elements from the previous two, and reminds us that it's always been us. Not the hunt, not the fear, but us. Balanced between the agony and the ecstasy, between home and hell. It's, I think, a fitting final piece for the trilogy and a cool-looking piece on its own.
There's a lot more to these pieces, but if I put it here, you'll get overwhelmed or bored and leave. But I really want you to read them and learn what I was thinking as I created them, so I wrote a full piece for each one of them. You can find them here:
This is a collection gathering the first three prints in the Tiger Series. They are:
These things we chase...
This piece, as most of mine, is heavily allegorical and tied to a very particular time in my life. A mindset, rather, and I painted to remind myself of the virtues and the traps of ambition. It also marks the return of the Read Thread! If you've been with me long enough, you remember it. If it doesn't ring a bell, go take a look at the Birds & Bones collection. It's also my first mammal as the main focus of a print and my first piece using this particular colour palette, which I fucking love! That's a lot of firsts and returns and things. I'm excited about this print, if you couldn't tell. And I know you're excited too, even if it’s just a little bit. So, go on. Add it to the cart.
These things we fear...
As much as “Chase” is about desire, this one is about fear, and as much as “Chase” points the finger at the perils of that desire, this one shines a light on the small deaths we all go through and how they are a necessary part of living. Yeah, we die to live again as something, someone different. So let’s not fear, and let’s not tarry. Let’s go into it with our eyes open, and maybe we’ll catch a glimpse of the in-between, so when we wake up (after a decision, a long night’s sleep, a tragedy, or an actual death), we are richer and stronger, and better beings.
These things we are...
Now we face the music and the conflict, the prize and the trap. This piece touches on and ties (no pun intended) a lot of the themes and elements from the previous two, and reminds us that it's always been us. Not the hunt, not the fear, but us. Balanced between the agony and the ecstasy, between home and hell. It's, I think, a fitting final piece for the trilogy and a cool-looking piece on its own.
There's a lot more to these pieces, but if I put it here, you'll get overwhelmed or bored and leave. But I really want you to read them and learn what I was thinking as I created them, so I wrote a full piece for each one of them. You can find them here:
This is a collection gathering the first three prints in the Tiger Series. They are:
These things we chase...
This piece, as most of mine, is heavily allegorical and tied to a very particular time in my life. A mindset, rather, and I painted to remind myself of the virtues and the traps of ambition. It also marks the return of the Read Thread! If you've been with me long enough, you remember it. If it doesn't ring a bell, go take a look at the Birds & Bones collection. It's also my first mammal as the main focus of a print and my first piece using this particular colour palette, which I fucking love! That's a lot of firsts and returns and things. I'm excited about this print, if you couldn't tell. And I know you're excited too, even if it’s just a little bit. So, go on. Add it to the cart.
These things we fear...
As much as “Chase” is about desire, this one is about fear, and as much as “Chase” points the finger at the perils of that desire, this one shines a light on the small deaths we all go through and how they are a necessary part of living. Yeah, we die to live again as something, someone different. So let’s not fear, and let’s not tarry. Let’s go into it with our eyes open, and maybe we’ll catch a glimpse of the in-between, so when we wake up (after a decision, a long night’s sleep, a tragedy, or an actual death), we are richer and stronger, and better beings.
These things we are...
Now we face the music and the conflict, the prize and the trap. This piece touches on and ties (no pun intended) a lot of the themes and elements from the previous two, and reminds us that it's always been us. Not the hunt, not the fear, but us. Balanced between the agony and the ecstasy, between home and hell. It's, I think, a fitting final piece for the trilogy and a cool-looking piece on its own.
There's a lot more to these pieces, but if I put it here, you'll get overwhelmed or bored and leave. But I really want you to read them and learn what I was thinking as I created them, so I wrote a full piece for each one of them. You can find them here: