Following her girlfriend, the shy yet EXPLOSIVE drummer for Marshmallow Fluff - Kendra Lepley-Pershing!
She uses her double kick drums to create an incredibly powerful and fast beat in any song, she LOVES going fast
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Jessie, Ben, Daisy: The Darkling and Alina are like a bickering old married couple.
Me: that means….
Ravka = the child suffering from their bickering and impending divorce, needs major therapy
Genya = the mutual friend who set them up, having a hard time deciding who to side with (at first)
David = their overworked accountant…he can only make so much magic happen
Nikolai = the dashing, shiny young new boyfriend, soon to be stepdad, who Alina, smirking, pulled up with at one of their proceedings
The rest of the Grisha = the assets and estates they’re fighting over
The Crows = Alina’s legal team, ready to win (Kaz = no time for your shit lawyer)
Mal = their pet do—….wait who?
Baghra = Baghra (yelling at them both)
They’re like one of those over the top rich married couples with their dramatic melancholias and flourish-y outfits and when they fight, they definitely overshare and make public spectacles and people look at each other like oh god, this again.
It’s a family drama, and mom and dad are taking some time off and just need couples therapy, that’s all. For now, daddy is sleeping in a hotel.
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🎨 Bill Braun 🎨
Bill Braun - Curious Redhead, acrylic on canvas, 20 x 24 inches
Bill Braun’s paintings are impressive feats of hyper-realism. At first glance they appear to be the ingredients for a child’s art project – crumpled craft paper, masking tape, staples and cut out construction paper. In reality, every element is expertly rendered in acrylic paint on canvas using a trompe l’oeil technique.
Great Blue Heron, acrylic on canvas, 33.75 x 36 inches
Click link on bottom left of photo for highest resolution
Bill Braun - Rabbits, acrylic on canvas, 31 x 24 inches
Visitors, acrylic on canvas, 24 x 34 inches
“Literally from the French, trompe l’oeil means “trick the eye.” An artist’s statement might undo the fundamental aim of convincing the viewer, at least for a moment, that what he sees are actual objects and not a painting. The basic rules of trompe l’oeil painting are that objects are rendered in real scale, and totally within a shallow painted space. This type of painting has always been a minor branch of realist painting, but with a very long history.”
–Bill Braun
Bill Braun - Puget Sound, acrylic on canvas, 34.5 x 36 inches
Bill Braun - New Building, acrylic on canvas, 36 x 48 inches
Bill Braun - Backyard, acrylic on canvas, 36 x 36 inches
A Meadow Song, acrylic on canvas, 18.5 x 14.5 inches
Bill Braun - Sierra Sunshine, acrylic on canvas, 36 x 48 inches
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