Signed Print# 3/3
Original Print exists unsold with custom framing and novel markers~
A Protest Against The Deep State: Le Patriot stands as a historical timestamp of a civilization confronting its own fragmentation; a portrait of institutional decay, cultural disorientation, and the widening distance between power and the people it claims to represent.
The piece reflects an age in which trust has eroded across political, financial, and cultural systems. Beneath the surface lies a deeper question: what happens to a society when human beings become increasingly disconnected from truth, embodiment, community, and one another?
At the center of the work is the tension between collapse and awakening. The horse, muzzled and blind, symbolizes a population restrained by fear, distraction, and inherited structures, yet still carrying the dormant instinct to awaken. Like America itself, it moves through confusion toward recognition.
The work references revolutionary cycles throughout history, from the French Revolution to contemporary political unrest, exploring the recurring struggle between centralized power and human sovereignty.
Signed Print# 3/3
Original Print exists unsold with custom framing and novel markers~
A Protest Against The Deep State: Le Patriot stands as a historical timestamp of a civilization confronting its own fragmentation; a portrait of institutional decay, cultural disorientation, and the widening distance between power and the people it claims to represent.
The piece reflects an age in which trust has eroded across political, financial, and cultural systems. Beneath the surface lies a deeper question: what happens to a society when human beings become increasingly disconnected from truth, embodiment, community, and one another?
At the center of the work is the tension between collapse and awakening. The horse, muzzled and blind, symbolizes a population restrained by fear, distraction, and inherited structures, yet still carrying the dormant instinct to awaken. Like America itself, it moves through confusion toward recognition.
The work references revolutionary cycles throughout history, from the French Revolution to contemporary political unrest, exploring the recurring struggle between centralized power and human sovereignty.