Bringing Pop Culture to Life - One Dragon at a Time
Bringing Pop Culture to Life - One Dragon at a Time
Not every piece begins with a movie scene.
This collection is rooted in observation rather than homage. These works grow out of moments, habits, and quiet discomforts that don’t belong to any single story, but feel deeply familiar all the same. They explore themes like consumerism, routine, absence, and the spaces we occupy without always noticing how they change us.
The dragon remains the constant, not as a character from another narrative, but as a stand-in. An observer. A small figure placed inside scenes drawn from everyday life, where meaning is built through accumulation, stillness, and restraint rather than spectacle.
These pieces aren’t about nostalgia or recognition. They’re about reflection. About looking at the systems we live inside and asking what they give us, what they take, and what quietly slips away while we’re not paying attention.
This is a growing collection. One built not from references, but from questions.
Add to Cart
Comfort doesn’t always look like comfort.
At first glance, the scene feels familiar: a bed, a soft blanket, a dragon paused mid-scroll. But rest has been replaced by repetition. Boxes stack higher and higher, crowding the space meant for sleep, while glowing screens pull attention forward toward the next promise, the next purchase, the next “must-have.” What’s already been acquired fades into the background, forgotten in favor of what’s coming next.
Designed for The Void Art Show, this piece reflects on consumerism not as excess, but as accumulation disguised as comfort. Everything is intentionally small and approachable, mirroring how easy it is to normalize excess when it arrives in tiny, cheerful pieces. The dragon isn’t celebrating what it has. It’s surrounded by it, frozen in a cycle where appreciation gives way to reflex.
Quiet, familiar, and unsettling in its restraint, Add to Cart asks where the line blurs between collecting and coping, and how often we mistake acquiring for fulfillment.
Inspired by: The Void Art Show (2026)
Medium: Hand-painted resin, mixed media packaging, miniature screens and sculpted environment
One-of-a-kind: When having it all leaves no room to rest.
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Sangue Di Drago
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