mmy baby:)
seen from Canada

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mmy baby:)
wait so what did you get everyone else?
I got Nya a pair of sunglasses, Cole a pack of gum, I got Zane an eraser shaped like an avocado, Lloyd got marbles, and Jay got sunscreen
also sensei has his own bathroom, and I don’t how quickly he goes through toilet paper so I got him a package with like six rolls
I drew him and named him Marll.
He and other like him were the first serpentine in Ninjago (before FSM showed up)
Marll is the FIRST fire elemental master ! (In this story at least)
I cant stop drawing my girlssssss from Lament of the Phoenix
Part 2 because image limit I just wanna say even though I hate the Masters, I love their markings on their robes so much! Again these all belong to Sega and their respective artists on the team (I wish I knew who the artists were behind these though)
Kiribaku month day 12! Avatar AU! More inktober, finally!!
Twitter: https://twitter.com/e_okami
Fire Master. Li Chen (李真). Sculpture. 2010.
Li Chen, born in 1963 in Yunlin, Taiwan, is a Taiwanese artist known for his bronze sculptures and oil paintings deeply infused with his own personal sentiment and the spirit and meaning of Eastern culture and religion. Before joining the military, he studied body sculpture in a workshop under Hsieh Tung-liang. He dedicated his studies to Buddhist and Taoist classics and religious art. His art career started when he was approached to produce traditional Buddhist statues for Buddhist shrines in the 1990s. While he worked on pursuing his own creative interests on the side, he found the process of creating these statues too restrictive. Li considers art to be an expression of creative desire from the heart, and through producing these statues, he did not see it as an act of subjective, artistic thinking. He does not claim these pieces made during this time to be his own creations.
Li made his official artistic debut in 1999. His pieces are devotions to his spiritual contemplations and philosophical interpretations, and expresses his concern towards humanity, society and culture. Viewers will find that his artwork exudes a particular lightness in their visual tension between emptiness and fullness.
Photo courtesy of Christie’s
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