"๐๐๐๐ ๐น๐๐๐ข๐๐ ๐๐๐ ๐ต๐๐ข๐" (๐ด๐๐๐ฅ๐๐๐๐๐ 1968) by SamaraBlue
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No AI - This artwork was created entirely by hand or with traditional digital tools.
Description
๐๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ ๐ธ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐๐๐๐ก - ๐๐๐ ๐ ๐ก๐ข๐๐๐ ๐๐๐โ๐๐ ๐๐๐ ๐๐๐ก๐ข๐
In einer alten Gรคrtnerei, vielleicht einer der begehrten โLost Placeโ Hot Spots, der einmal Schutz, ja sogar Leben bedeutete, steht ein knorriger, uralter Baum, halb Kreatur, halb Naturwesen, und ringt um seine letzten Krรคfte. Seine รste strecken sich in den leeren Himmel eines zerstรถrten Gewรคchshauses. Es ist dunkel, der Ort verlassen. Zerbrochene Fenster, verbogene Metalltrรคger, verlassene Schrรคnke. Alles scheint vergessen, als hรคtte der Mensch selbst sich aus diesem Schutzraum der Natur zurรผckgezogen oder ihn mutwillig zerstรถrt.
Der Baum ist das Zentrum der Aussage, das symbolische Herz des Bildes. Sein Kรถrper wirkt verdreht, schmerzerfรผllt, verwittert und doch lebt er. Einige Zweige tragen noch grรผne Blรคtter, durchzogen von leuchtenden Glutadern. Sie stehen fรผr den letzten Lebensimpuls, das, was noch nicht verloren ist. Doch sie sind umgeben von kahlen รsten, von trockener Rinde und Rauch, der sich wie eine letzte Warnung in die Luft windet.
Er ist ein Wesen zwischen Verzweiflung und Hoffnung. Sein Gesicht, menschlich-animalisch-hรถlzern, verzieht sich zu einem stummen Schrei, einem inneren Ruf: โHilf mir.โ
Und so streckt er eine Wurzelhand aus. Nicht angreifend, nicht anklagend, sondern weisend. Bittend. Auffordernd. Er zeigt auf den Feuerlรถscher, das letzte Werkzeug gegen den drohenden Untergang. Er bietet ihn an als Unterstรผtzung.
Vor ihm steht das Mรคdchen, jung, individuell, unbeirrt. Ihre Pose ist selbstbewusst, fast rebellisch, mit erhobener Hand, der Welt Einhalt gebietend, Zeichen einer Mahnung oder eines stillen Schwurs. Die Brille auf ihrer Nase spiegelt nicht nur Trend, sondern Distanz. Sie ist nicht blind, aber blickt durch einen Filter auf die Welt, nimmt nur das Notwendige wahr. Ihre Kleidung zeigt eine schwarze Katze mit Schwert, ein Wรคchtertier, ein Zeichen fรผr Kampfgeist und Wehrhaftigkeit. Sie steht fรผr eine Generation, die nicht mehr wegguckt, sondern der Zerstรถrung ins Gesicht sieht, auch wenn sie noch nicht weiร, wie sie handeln soll.
Doch ist es wirklich nur ihre Aufgabe, die Welt zu retten?
Das Bild stellt diese Frage in aller Schรคrfe. Es macht sichtbar, wie viel Verantwortung auf den Schultern der Jungen lastet, dargestellt nicht durch offene Last, sondern durch die stille Konfrontation mit einer sterbenden, leidenden Erde.
Der Ort selbst wird zum Spiegelbild des Zustands der Welt.
Die Dunkelheit, das verlassene Gewรคchshaus, die Unordnung und das rostrote Licht sprechen eine klare Sprache. Dies ist ein Ort des Verfalls, der Isolation. Wo einst Natur geschรผtzt und gepflegt wurde, herrscht nun Zerfall. Doch genau hier, in diesem Zwischenraum, blรผhen vereinzelt zarte rote Farbtupfer im Elend. Sie stehen fรผr Hoffnung, fรผr Widerstandskraft, fรผr das unbรคndige Leben, das nicht aufhรถren will.
Aber auch fรผr Schmerz. Denn Mohn ist nicht nur Symbol fรผr Regeneration, sondern auch fรผr Vergรคnglichkeit, fรผr Schlaf, fรผr die Grenze zwischen Bewusstsein und Vergessen.
๐๐ช๐๐ฒ๐ฝ
Das Bild ist ein stiller, kraftvoller Aufschrei.
Es ist keine Klage, sondern ein Appell. Kein Vorwurf, sondern ein Weckruf.
Der Baum zeigt auf das Notwendige.
Das Mรคdchen steht bereit, aber nicht allein, sollte sich nicht allein verantwortlich fรผhlen.
Doch die alles entscheidende Frage bleibt offen. Werden auch die anderen es sehen? Werden sie handeln?
Denn nur gemeinsam kann der Feuerlรถscher wirklich greifen, bevor die letzte Glut das Wurzelwerk entzรผndet.
-Samara Blue/Kerstin Ellinghoven
๐โ๐๐ ๐กโ๐ ๐ธ๐๐๐ก ๐๐ข๐๐๐ . ๐โ๐ ๐ ๐๐๐๐๐ก ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐ ๐๐๐ก๐ข๐๐ An old nursery, perhaps once one of those coveted โlost placeโ hot spots that once meant shelter, even life. Now a gnarled, ancient tree stands there, half creature, half spirit of nature, struggling for its last strength. Its branches reach into the empty sky of a shattered greenhouse. It is dark, the place abandoned. Broken windows, twisted steel beams, deserted cupboards. Everything seems forgotten, as if humanity itself had retreated from this refuge of natureโor deliberately destroyed it. The tree is the core of the statement, the symbolic heart of the image. Its body appears twisted, aching, weatheredโand yet it lives. Some branches still carry green leaves, streaked with glowing veins of ember. They stand for the last pulse of life, for what is not yet lost. But they are surrounded by bare limbs, by dry bark and smoke curling into the air like a final warning. It is a being caught between despair and hope. Its face, human-animal-wooden, twists into a silent cry, an inner call: โHelp me.โ And so it stretches out a root-hand. Not to attack, not accusing, but guiding. Begging. Urging. It points toward the fire extinguisherโthe last tool against the looming downfall. It offers it, as if in support. In front of it stands the girlโyoung, individual, unwavering. Her pose is confident, almost rebellious, one hand raised as if to halt the world, a sign of warning or a silent vow. The glasses on her nose reflect not just trend but distance. She is not blind, but she sees the world through a filter, perceiving only what is necessary. Her shirt shows a black cat with a swordโa guardian animal, a symbol of defiance and resilience. She represents a generation that no longer looks away, that faces destruction head-on, even if it does not yet know how to act. But is it truly her task alone to save the world? The image confronts us with this question in all its sharpness. It makes visible how much responsibility weighs on young shouldersโnot through an obvious burden, but through the silent confrontation with a dying, suffering Earth. The place itself becomes a mirror of the worldโs condition. The darkness, the abandoned greenhouse, the disorder, the rust-red light speak clearly. This is a place of decay, of isolation. Where once nature was protected and nurtured, now only ruin remains. Yet here, in this in-between space, fragile red blossoms emerge from misery. They stand for hope, for resilience, for the untamed force of life that refuses to end. But they also speak of pain. For poppies are not only symbols of regeneration, but also of transience, of sleep, of the boundary between awareness and oblivion. ๐๐ธ๐ท๐ฌ๐ต๐พ๐ผ๐ฒ๐ธ๐ท The image is a silent, powerful outcry. Not a lament, but an appeal. Not an accusation, but a wake-up call. The tree points to what is necessary. The girl stands ready, but not aloneโshe should not feel the weight on her shoulders alone. Yet the decisive question remains: Will others see it too? Will they act? Because only together can the fire extinguisher truly take holdโbefore the last ember sets the roots ablaze. โSamara Blue/Kerstin Ellinghoven Made with Daz 3D I No Ki I Krefeld, 08.06.2025
๐โ๐๐ ๐กโ๐ ๐ธ๐๐๐ก ๐๐ข๐๐๐ . ๐โ๐ ๐ ๐๐๐๐๐ก ๐๐๐๐ ๐๐ ๐๐๐ก๐ข๐๐ An old nursery, perhaps once one of those coveted โlost placeโ hot spots that once meant shelter, even life. Now a gnarled, ancient tree stands there, half creature, half spirit of nature, struggling for its last strength. Its branches reach into the empty sky of a shattered greenhouse. It is dark, the place abandoned. Broken windows, twisted steel beams, deserted cupboards. Everything seems forgotten, as if humanity itself had retreated from this refuge of natureโor deliberately destroyed it. The tree is the core of the statement, the symbolic heart of the image. Its body appears twisted, aching, weatheredโand yet it lives. Some branches still carry green leaves, streaked with glowing veins of ember. They stand for the last pulse of life, for what is not yet lost. But they are surrounded by bare limbs, by dry bark and smoke curling into the air like a final warning. It is a being caught between despair and hope. Its face, human-animal-wooden, twists into a silent cry, an inner call: โHelp me.โ And so it stretches out a root-hand. Not to attack, not accusing, but guiding. Begging. Urging. It points toward the fire extinguisherโthe last tool against the looming downfall. It offers it, as if in support. In front of it stands the girlโyoung, individual, unwavering. Her pose is confident, almost rebellious, one hand raised as if to halt the world, a sign of warning or a silent vow. The glasses on her nose reflect not just trend but distance. She is not blind, but she sees the world through a filter, perceiving only what is necessary. Her shirt shows a black cat with a swordโa guardian animal, a symbol of defiance and resilience. She represents a generation that no longer looks away, that faces destruction head-on, even if it does not yet know how to act. But is it truly her task alone to save the world? The image confronts us with this question in all its sharpness. It makes visible how much responsibility weighs on young shouldersโnot through an obvious burden, but through the silent confrontation with a dying, suffering Earth. The place itself becomes a mirror of the worldโs condition. The darkness, the abandoned greenhouse, the disorder, the rust-red light speak clearly. This is a place of decay, of isolation. Where once nature was protected and nurtured, now only ruin remains. Yet here, in this in-between space, fragile red blossoms emerge from misery. They stand for hope, for resilience, for the untamed force of life that refuses to end. But they also speak of pain. For poppies are not only symbols of regeneration, but also of transience, of sleep, of the boundary between awareness and oblivion. ๐๐ธ๐ท๐ฌ๐ต๐พ๐ผ๐ฒ๐ธ๐ท The image is a silent, powerful outcry. Not a lament, but an appeal. Not an accusation, but a wake-up call. The tree points to what is necessary. The girl stands ready, but not aloneโshe should not feel the weight on her shoulders alone. Yet the decisive question remains: Will others see it too? Will they act? Because only together can the fire extinguisher truly take holdโbefore the last ember sets the roots ablaze. โSamara Blue/Kerstin Ellinghoven Made with Daz 3D I No Ki I Krefeld, 08.06.2025

Comments (5)
Wonderful artwork!
Thank you so much :-)
Excellent work!!!
many thanks, rbowen :-)
Superlative artwork
gaius, nice you like it - thx
It truly is a sad, sad world out there. That face in the tree trunk says it all. It's time to realize it's the only world we have. Mars isn't going to work. We need to take care of what we have.
Beautiful artwork here, my friend!
Wonderfully done once again !!! ๐๐โโ๏ธ