Iwazaru

Iwazaru


Iwazaru, the third of the three wise monkeys, speaks no evil, covering his mouth.

Iwazaru, the third of the three wise monkeys, speaks no evil, covering his mouth.

Iwazaru is different from her friends. She feels the senses of isolation, fear, confusion & frustration with other people. Its a continuous struggle not to vocalize her incredulity at the stupidity & shortsightedness of her fellow beings. Sometimes she wonders if its a form of repressed Tourettes Syndrome or if she’s just a bad person who doesn’t deserve a voice.

In Japanese legend, the Sanshi are the Three Corpses or worms, living inside everyone’s body. The Sanshi keep track of the good deeds and particularly the bad deeds of the person they inhabit. They report these deeds to the god, Ten-Tei. The three wise monekys caused the Sanshi and, ultimately, the god, Ten-Tei not to see, say or hear the bad deeds of a person. Protecting them from judgement or persecution.

This partially ties into modern psychology which talks of the vulnerable child, the nurturing parent and the critical adult inside each personality. The idea of there being multiple facets to ones personality fascinates me. We are not just driven by one inevitable force. We have options if we tune into the different voices in our heads.

The three monkeys proverb is sometimes used to refer to a lack of moral responsibility on the part of people who refuse to acknowledge impropriety, looking the other way or feigning ignorance. Perhaps a result of not being in touch with their more kind, empathetic inner voices?

Personally, I struggle daily with feeling different from the majority of the human population. I have Aspergers so it often feels like I’m from a different planet. Other people frustrate me and confuse me. I have thoughts going through my head of what I’d like to say to them instinctively. But most of the time I stop myself.

Kikazaru

Kikazaru


Kikazaru is one of the three wise monekys. He hears no evil by covering his ears.


In Japanese legend, the Sanshi are the Three Corpses or worms, living inside everyone’s body. The Sanshi keep track of the good deeds and particularly the bad deeds of the person they inhabit. They report these deeds to the god, Ten-Tei. The three wise monekys caused the Sanshi and, ultimately, the god, Ten-Tei not to see, say or hear the bad deeds of a person. Protecting them from judgement or persecution.

When I was a child I had imaginary friends who I thought provided good thoughts and bad thoughts to me. I was the third, neutral person who could be influenced either way. In a way my imaginary friends operated like the three monkeys – giving me an excuse for bad behavior. I also experienced name-calling and bullying from children and teachers at school. The idea of being able to choose not to listen to those cruel and damaging voices is encouraging. That we have a choice to allow our protective inner voices to be louder and more powerful.

This partially ties into modern psychology which talks of the vulnerable child, the nurturing parent and the critical adult inside each personality. The idea of there being multiple facets to ones personality fascinates me. We are not just driven by one inevitable force. We have options if we tune into the different voices in our heads.

The three monkeys proverb is sometimes used to refer to a lack of moral responsibility on the part of people who refuse to acknowledge impropriety, looking the other way or feigning ignorance. Perhaps a result of not being in touch with their more kind, empathetic inner voices?
Coping With Stress

Coping With Stress

This piece was created under incredible strain – originally during the Thatcher years, then updated in 2020 during COVID. It’s about how we often cope in very trying times. We reach for our old crutches, drink, drugs and a brave face. It also celebrates feminism and equality between men and women.

Clean Up

Clean Up

She was sick of being under-valued. sick of being pushed around. Of being judged. Put into a hole. Not allowed to prosper. So, with mop in hand she wiped the tired old art off the walls and invited her friends to shake things up. “Come on girls! Lets clean up in here!” She yelled with renewed optimism and unshakable vigor.

This original 1980’s illustration has been re-drawn at large poster size in typical 1980’s fanzine style.

Originally drawn with India ink on chalkboard. Resized and digitally reworked in Photoshop.

7200 pixels by 5400 pixels | 24 inches by 18 inches | 60.96 cm x 45.72 cm | 300 DPI resolution.

Can be provided at various other sizes on request to suit different displays.

Cryptofamily

Cryptofamily

A tribute to all the artists in the cryptofamily who have influenced me
and my work. You know who you are!
Punk rock sculpture meets cryptoart influences head on. Look and you will
find your influence hidden deeply.
Digital painting with 3D modelling and VR artwork done in Gravity Sketch,
Photoshop & Procreate 2048 x 2048