
HAPPY 1ST BIRTHDAY SADIE!!

“As the Easter dawn broke, a Bunny, taller than a full grown man and muscles flexed with determination, approached the tomb where Jesus lay dead.
“With a single effort, the Bunny lifted the massive stone blocking the opening, revealing the cold and darkened grave within. Moments after going inside, he emerged, gently cradling the dead Christ in his arms.
“The Bunny’s furry form rippled with strength, yet he placed the body of the still Jesus into a waiting golden chariot with a kind of gentleness belying that strength.
“The Bunny then turned to the gathered crowd, knowing his work was not yet finished, and from a basket, handed out colorfully painted eggs with a flourish; each one a symbol of the joy of resurrection.
“Then, with a nod to the heavens, the Bunny returned into the chariot, and, pulled by magnificent braying goats with shimmering horns, they set off into the sky, leaving behind a trail of Easter magic and the promise of hope fulfilled.”
-Buddha Cat Cult 3:31
March 22, 2024
Can someone please remind me why we can’t have a “Masters of the Universe” or “Conan the Barbarian” film franchise that is half as epic as an Earl Norem painting?
Earl H. Norem (April 17, 1923 – June 19, 2015), who signed his work simply ‘Norem’, was an American artist primarily known for his painted covers for men’s adventure magazines published by Martin Goodman’s Magazine Management Company and for Goodman’s line of black-and-white comics magazines affiliated with his Marvel Comics division.
Over his long career, Norem also illustrated covers for novels and gaming books, as well as movie posters, baseball programs, and trading cards.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Earl_Norem
Pieces included in this post are mainly covers or posters from “He-Man and the Masters of the Universe” and “The Savage Sword of Conan” magazines.
Earl Norem is clearly a prophet fit for the Buddha Cat Cult.
“I can read your thought balloons… I know what you are planning…”
-Multiversity, “Pax Romana” by Grant Morrison, Frank Quitely, and Nathan Fairbanks.
One of Grant Morrison’s greatest meta ideas.
Circa Late 2016 – Early 2017