Left and Right, intertwined in storymode (Work in Progress!)
If you wonder what meaning lies behind this piece - click the various details on the right here - where i consider a few more things in detail. It would also be helpful to have read the rather long story of how this whole world was developed, over a period of 20 years on the About Me part of this website.
This is the second piece in my new series based in this world I have… grown. We follow a character on their path with two banners from left and right. There are two sheets of paper here, one coming from each part of the brain, perhaps? (It certainly seems that way, with creative stuff like art supplies, experiments or brawn covering the right side and cognitive and logic themes, iconographic order from the left) ~ anyway they Connect into one road behind the large figure making the centrepiece of the drawing. Growing up from these roads grow comic style white frames - most of them have their own image of a sky to go with it {timestamped} with the origin, the sheet of paper on either left or right being a new sheet next day he present at the end of it. The two banners create two roads, sometimes intertwined, sometimes loose - and together they form the storyline.
this is the digital sketch
this is the digital sketch
So, at the top of these sheets of paper (not in the digital v though) there are jagged lines to suggest it has been torn from a sketchbook. This could also induce an image of the arrowslits at the top ridge of a castle, but a sketchbook is a playground for ideas.
Each of these drawings will center around one character in some shape or form relating to their own storyline. Here, we see a protagonist (referred to as P) in the middle of the piece, gluing this strip of paper to the road. The protagonist can also be seen several instances along the road, and there are timestamps on each sky to indicate progression of the story.
At the bottom right, and so at the present time, we see one of P`s friends coveting a sun emoji, cuddling and embracing it. So the "moral" of the piece is as simple as this: Be the sun in other peoples lives.