Contemporary Cave Art #7
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Discovered in a bone-dry cavern in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood, archaeologists-cum-curators believe the drawings represent sacred maps, with a spirit trail superimposed over two totemic tones meant to provoke transcendence.
Artist: Bryant Rousseau, an editor at The New York Times by night and an Inside Out conceptual artist by day
Crayon and ink on 4” x 6” paper; signed; matted; and framed (8” x 10” wooden frame)
The copyright symbols are digital watermarks only; they do NOT appear on the actual artwork. Each drawing comes with a multifactor authentication document (numeric, linguistic and visual) that is itself a mini/minor work of art.
To view the full, uncropped artwork, right click and open image in new tab.
To view the full, uncropped artwork, right click and open image in new tab.
Discovered in a bone-dry cavern in New York’s Chelsea neighborhood, archaeologists-cum-curators believe the drawings represent sacred maps, with a spirit trail superimposed over two totemic tones meant to provoke transcendence.
Artist: Bryant Rousseau, an editor at The New York Times by night and an Inside Out conceptual artist by day
Crayon and ink on 4” x 6” paper; signed; matted; and framed (8” x 10” wooden frame)
The copyright symbols are digital watermarks only; they do NOT appear on the actual artwork. Each drawing comes with a multifactor authentication document (numeric, linguistic and visual) that is itself a mini/minor work of art.
To view the full, uncropped artwork, right click and open image in new tab.