This piece was drawn to reflect the overt change the United States transitioned from 2016 through 2000. Although there has always been a divide, the openness that this divide reaches out and touches schools, the news media, and the everyday actions of our citizens in the streets of our country, we are openly confused and divided. The single white two to four-pixel-wide line of purity and reverence by which the country was founded weaves its way through the red and blue sides of our beliefs and political divides. The Single Line Art logo is in the lower right corner of the piece.
Each piece of art in this collection begins with single contiguous two to four-pixel-wide line that begins and ends in the same place, making it a circle. The line doesn't intersect with itself anywhere and is drawn by intuition, feeling, and thought. Each side of the line (the inside and outside of the circle) is then colored.
Etais-Unis Confus (United States Confused)
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
Etais-Unis Confus (United States Confused)
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityExpirationFrom
- PriceUSD PriceQuantityFloor DifferenceExpirationFrom
This piece was drawn to reflect the overt change the United States transitioned from 2016 through 2000. Although there has always been a divide, the openness that this divide reaches out and touches schools, the news media, and the everyday actions of our citizens in the streets of our country, we are openly confused and divided. The single white two to four-pixel-wide line of purity and reverence by which the country was founded weaves its way through the red and blue sides of our beliefs and political divides. The Single Line Art logo is in the lower right corner of the piece.
Each piece of art in this collection begins with single contiguous two to four-pixel-wide line that begins and ends in the same place, making it a circle. The line doesn't intersect with itself anywhere and is drawn by intuition, feeling, and thought. Each side of the line (the inside and outside of the circle) is then colored.