Napoleon & Cat 1 (2019) Painting by Oberlin The Artist

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Sold by Oberlin The Artist

  • Original Artwork (One Of A Kind) Painting, Pencil / Acrylic on Paper
  • Dimensions Height 8in, Width 6in
  • Framing This artwork is not framed
  • Categories Illustration Caricature
I love to illustrate silly things. My sketchbooks are full of ridiculous images like this. You might not find it so strange; after all, Napoleon was a human and I know many humans who like cats. Still, something about it is funny to me, which is why I drew it in the first place. Scenes of morbid death, loss and despair have their place, but for now[...]
I love to illustrate silly things. My sketchbooks are full of ridiculous images like this. You might not find it so strange; after all, Napoleon was a human and I know many humans who like cats. Still, something about it is funny to me, which is why I drew it in the first place. Scenes of morbid death, loss and despair have their place, but for now something silly. This image was sketched and then re-sketched on a piece of small, textured paper. The paper itself is now fixed to a sturdy piece of board as I continue to work on it. It's small enough to forget about; the whole 'out of sight, out of mind' thing. With larger canvases, the ones that you can trip over, that doesn't exactly happen. This is a work in progress that I am very fond of.

Related themes

NapoleonCatWorkProgressUnderpainting

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Oberlin has always been an artist, developing a love for fountain pens at an early age and deciding to train both hands to draw. They had heard adults talk about a spooky thing called ‘arthritis’. The artist[...]

Oberlin has always been an artist, developing a love for fountain pens at an early age and deciding to train both hands to draw. They had heard adults talk about a spooky thing called ‘arthritis’. The artist is now ambidextrous.

Oberlin began having seizures and was diagnosed with epilepsy during their freshman year of college. Art helped tremendously. 

Some of Oberlin’s paintings come from sketches. Some of the paintings are scenes and shapes that mutate from color. The commonality is expression. The sketches themselves come from dreams and conversations. Some of these ideas have ruminated for months or years. Others happened in a flash.

Any of the art that you see may have since been painted over, traded, donated, given away, eaten, burned, buried or destroyed.

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