Size: A3 ($29.7 \times 42.0$ cm)
Paper: Premium 290gsm archival stock
Artist: FunnyTummy
Authenticity: Signed by the artist
This piece by FunnyTummy is a striking exercise in visual layering, where modern cinematic tragedy meets comic book history.
At its core, the work is a reimagining of the legendary cover of The Uncanny X-Men issue 251, famously depicting Logan crucified on a wooden X. By overlaying the distressed, wide-eyed gaze of Wanda Maximoff atop this iconic scene of suffering, the painting explores the shared burden of power and the emotional cost of being "uncanny." It suggests a quiet, haunting parallel between the physical torture of Wolverine and the internal, psychological fracturing of the Scarlet Witch.
The use of hyper-realistic "tape" and torn-paper effects creates a sense of a history being rewritten or a memory being frantically pieced back together. It is a visceral study of vulnerability, power, and the scars both physical and mental left behind by the hero's journey.
Size: A3 ($29.7 \times 42.0$ cm)
Paper: Premium 290gsm archival stock
Artist: FunnyTummy
Authenticity: Signed by the artist
This piece by FunnyTummy is a striking exercise in visual layering, where modern cinematic tragedy meets comic book history.
At its core, the work is a reimagining of the legendary cover of The Uncanny X-Men issue 251, famously depicting Logan crucified on a wooden X. By overlaying the distressed, wide-eyed gaze of Wanda Maximoff atop this iconic scene of suffering, the painting explores the shared burden of power and the emotional cost of being "uncanny." It suggests a quiet, haunting parallel between the physical torture of Wolverine and the internal, psychological fracturing of the Scarlet Witch.
The use of hyper-realistic "tape" and torn-paper effects creates a sense of a history being rewritten or a memory being frantically pieced back together. It is a visceral study of vulnerability, power, and the scars both physical and mental left behind by the hero's journey.