The Red Destiny | 30X30 Gallery Wrap
The Red Destiny | 30X30 Gallery Wrap
The Red Destiny | 30X30 Gallery Wrap

The Red Destiny | 30X30 Gallery Wrap

Regular price $200.00 Sale price$150.00
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In the artist's words

When i was little I would take my action figures apart and put them back together in different configurations. That's how I knew what a pile of slain enemy action figures would look like in a real life battle situation.

If you have questions about the piece, feel free to message — happy to talk about it.

Robot human hybrid description

A lone samurai warrior — pale-skinned, dark-haired, wearing a headband — crouches mid-battle across a heap of dismembered robots, dual blades extended. She's not in a moment of triumph. She's still working.

The palette is almost entirely muted grey and brown, which makes the deep red sky hit harder. A large dark circle — sun or moon — anchors the background, with horizontal brushstrokes of rust and shadow cutting across it. The loose, gestural brushwork gives the whole piece the feel of controlled chaos: nothing is over-rendered, everything is readable.

A second, smaller figure launches from the upper left — another enemy, mid-air, sword leveled — and the ground beneath her is a tangle of robot faces, limbs, and torsos. The pile reads dense and specific, not generic wreckage.

This connects with people who grew up on action figures, anime, mecha, or samurai films — and who want wall art that has some actual weight to it. Strong fit for a gaming room, studio, or any space that can handle something with energy and edge.

These gallery wrapped canvases have features:

  • Archival-grade poly-cotton mix canvas
  • pH neutral and acid-free — won't yellow over time
  • Bright white surface with a semi-glossy sheen
  • Giclee inkjet printing, color calibrated for accuracy
  • Colors rated fade-resistant for 100+ years
  • Hand-stretched on solid wood stretcher bars
  • Solid wood frame won't warp or bow over time

In the artist's words

When i was little I would take my action figures apart and put them back together in different configurations. That's how I knew what a pile of slain enemy action figures would look like in a real life battle situation.

If you have questions about the piece, feel free to message — happy to talk about it.

Robot human hybrid description

A lone samurai warrior — pale-skinned, dark-haired, wearing a headband — crouches mid-battle across a heap of dismembered robots, dual blades extended. She's not in a moment of triumph. She's still working.

The palette is almost entirely muted grey and brown, which makes the deep red sky hit harder. A large dark circle — sun or moon — anchors the background, with horizontal brushstrokes of rust and shadow cutting across it. The loose, gestural brushwork gives the whole piece the feel of controlled chaos: nothing is over-rendered, everything is readable.

A second, smaller figure launches from the upper left — another enemy, mid-air, sword leveled — and the ground beneath her is a tangle of robot faces, limbs, and torsos. The pile reads dense and specific, not generic wreckage.

This connects with people who grew up on action figures, anime, mecha, or samurai films — and who want wall art that has some actual weight to it. Strong fit for a gaming room, studio, or any space that can handle something with energy and edge.

This is a 30 in x 30 in gallery wrapped canvas print. The canvas is 1.5 in thick.

Hardware is installed and it's ready to hang. the edges are solid black, the ink is archival.

There is a light satin finish to protect the ink.

These prints are from a vendor I really trust, and when i do interruptions, this is what i use.

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