posted on Jun, 24 2005 @ 11:27 PM
Let me interject some humor. It looks like a shriner's hat without the tassle. Someone drew a depiction of the crucifixtion on it but added a
macaroni on the bottom of the vertical beam. The victim attached to the cross has no features, meaning the artist was not very good at art beyond
adding very basic dimension to the staple stick figure. Although the picture represents the headgear for a shriner, it is obvious, the artist has no
concept of dimensions in that both the top and bottom of the tapered tube it represents has both a top end and bottom end. My evaluation is that
either the artists drew this while standing up above his reference or they lied down low on the ground when they got tired, all the while forgetting
the rule of perspectives. Maybe the artist lives in an added dimension, which is a possibility. The artist also was so disturbed by the subject of
his render that they had to draw it through a mirror, as is evidenced by the backwards characters and the fact that the victim is pointed to the
viewers right or the central figures left hand side, which means the vicitim could not have been Godly, in that God always had a great affection for
the right side or the right hand. The alignment of the vertical beam and the angle of reflection on the moon means the subject was keenly aware that
the earth, sun, and moon were all aligned with the said piece of wood at the time the artist created the work, or they just used the moon as a
reference, because it was night and the only light (this doesnt explain the shading from another angle from the right of our view) I think there was
possibly a carbon-arc spot somewhere off frame to the right during the pose. And for my slightly less humorous thoughts, the seven stars represent
the number of perfection - 7. The idea that the top of the vertical beam divides the seven symbolizes the duality of the physical world or a dividing
of 7. The arc of stars means that the artist had some sense of geometry or figured out the exact placement using trigonometry using an abacus or a TI
scientific calculator. Maybe the arc represents that God is unhappy as an upside down smiley face. Even so, the stars are above the moon, which is
above the central scene. This is an indication that stars get payed a lot more than the moon and the poor naked sap posing on the cross is probably
working to buy some clothes. Of course, the bent macaroni at the bottom of the beam means that God hates pasta. This is clearly evident because God
created Celiac Disease to punish people who eat flour made products as the ultimate curse for this religious figures death.
EDIT: Perhaps it isn't a macaroni, but a crude depiction of the serpent.
[edit on 24-6-2005 by ben91069]